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also: "the fountainhead and beginning" fons sapientiae, verbum Dei: the fount of knowledge is the word of God: motto of Bishop Blanchet High School fons vitae caritas: love is the fountain of life: motto of Chisipite Senior School and Chisipite Junior School: formosam resonare doces Amaryllida silvas: teach the woods to re-echo "fair Amaryllis"
an-fangen ("to start") Root verb in second position: Ich fange mit der Arbeit an. ("I start work.") Root verb in final position: Morgens trinke ich Schokolade, weil ich dann mit der Arbeit an-fange. ("In the mornings I drink hot chocolate, because afterwards I begin work.") Rarely a separable prefix may actually be two (or more) words:
F word (disambiguation), euphemism for several words beginning with "f" Dominical letter F for a common year starting on Tuesday; F, as an online expression of respects to a recently deceased person (as a reference to the videogame Call of Duty: Advanced Warfare) F, the production code for the 1964 Doctor Who serial The Aztecs
Words can hold a lot of power. They can uplift and inspire. Here are 50 quotes about life to motivate you.
In some languages, like Welsh, verbs have special inflections to be used in negative clauses. (In some language families, this may lead to reference to a negative mood.) An example is Japanese, which conjugates verbs in the negative after adding the suffix -nai (indicating negation), e.g. taberu ("eat") and tabenai ("do not eat").
A stem beginning with f + a vowel takes both, e.g. fan "wait", d'fhan sé "he waited". The preterite impersonal, e.g. fanadh "one waited", neither undergoes lenition nor receives d'. The - f - in future and conditional stems is pronounced /h/; except in the conditional 2nd person singular and the impersonal, where it remains /f/.
Root Meaning in English Origin language Etymology (root origin) English examples fa-, fa (FA) [1]say, speak: Latin: fārī, see also fatērī: affable, bifarious ...
This list contains acronyms, initialisms, and pseudo-blends that begin with the letter F. For the purposes of this list: acronym = an abbreviation pronounced as if it were a word, e.g., SARS = severe acute respiratory syndrome , pronounced to rhyme with cars