The idiom accompanies brief advice that the giver assumes that the recipient understands without supplying a lot of detail. The implication is that for a wise person, just a subtle hint will suffice to reveal what is intended.
Wise one
I have no idea what you mean by "word wise," but amar is the Spanish word for "to love."
It's a German saying wise
wise = chacham (חכם)
"Erudite" is an abstract word for wise.
The Hawaiian word for wise is ʻikepili.
The positive form of a word is usually the unaltered word itself. The positive for the word wise is ...wise.
"Sapientiae" is the Latin word for "wisdom" or "knowledge." It is derived from the Latin word "sapiens," which means "wise" or "intelligent."
unwise.
No,wise is a noun.
The word comes from the word "wise" and the suffix "ard". See Christian Truth and Middle-earth Myths.
The English meaning of the Latin word 'sapiens' is wise, sensible, judicious. It's the participle of the verb 'sapere', which means 'to have a flavor or taste'; 'to be able or have a taste'; or 'to be sensible or wise, discern, think'.