pear
sounds like pair
A pear
No. It does not. When one verbally pronounces the word, it sounds something like, "grahhh-see-us". If there was an accent, it would sound like, "grah-seeeee-iss."
It is how you pronounce the letter "y" in the alphabet. My Spanish book, Vistas 4th edition, gives two pronunciations for the letter "y." One, as above, is the preferred "i griega" which sounds like "ee gree a ga" where both a's are long, and the other is "ye" which sounds like "yay," also with a long "a" sound.
A Puzzle piece
-- I can think of one, that is it! Niamh or Neive or Nieve. Hope I (kind of) helped.--
There really is not an opposite. What is the opposite of friend? Maybe 'enemy', but not really that, either. What is the opposite of 'une' or 'one'? That is like asking what the opposite of a piece of wood is . . . there is none.
a pear/ pair
It sounds like a hollow piece of wood (even though it is not) and it sounds lovely! You should go try one out somewhere.
i dont fink that there is one, but i heard of "ITA PALM FRUIT" but if you say it with and E sound instead of and I sound it sounds like "EAT A PALM FRUIT",:)
One foot
I ate a strawberry. I had one orange with lunch.
Yami Yami no Mi....the one that Marshall D. Teach(Bleackbeard) is using. In my own opinion, it's enel's devil fruit or kizaru. God-like DF.
Facebook One Piece Adventures.
20 calories for one piece
in the tree of goodnes of fountains
Sounds like it may have been replaced at one point with an inferior piece.
It sounds like you're asking if it was shipped pre-assembled, in one piece, and erected by a crane large enough to raise the entire statue in one piece. If that's what you are asking, then the answer is "No".
This sounds like a real mess. It sounds like two joint tenants own a piece of property in common with one having the mortgage in his name. The other joint tenant has a piece of property that has a home equity loan about to go into default. In one state the joint tenant with the home equity in default would lose that piece of property. It would not affect the piece of property he or she owned with a different person.