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etymologised Meaning in Bengali



একটি শব্দের জন্য ব্যুত্পত্তি বা শিক্ষাদীক্ষা দিতে বা একটি ব্যুত্পত্তি (সুপারিশ





etymologised's Usage Examples:

"offering" and Classical Syriac: ܩܘܪܒܐ‎, romanized: qurbānā "sacrifice", etymologised through the cognate Arabic triliteral as "a way or means of approaching.


Other scholars etymologised Nushibi without Šadapït in mind.


London has been etymologised as Brittonic *lin- + dun- ("lake fort").


The Sumero-Akkadian name for Jerusalem, uru-salim, is variously etymologised to mean "foundation of [or: by] the god Shalim": from West Semitic yrw.


The first element has been etymologised as Latin ecclesia 'church' or the form it took when borrowed into Cumbric.


transcribed as Butchulla, Batjala, Badjala and other variations, has been etymologised as signifying "sea folk", though Norman Tindale suggested that the word.


The name is presumably from a personal name Grifo, but was etymologised as related to Greif "griffin" from at least the 15th century.


Carham has generally been etymologised as an Old English place-name.


meaning to venerate "worship, honour shown to an object, which has been etymologised as "worthiness or worth-ship"—to give, at its simplest, worth to something.


In some rabbinical interpretations, Amalek is etymologised as am lak, "a people who lick (blood)," but most specialists regard the.


Andrew Breeze has etymologised this name as a compound of the Brittonic word *kok- ('rock') and a personal.


The name "Kambhojas" is etymologised as Kamblala + Bhojas ("the Bhojas with Kambalas or blankets") as well.


The author, moreover, etymologised the word as consisting of the words quen 'queen' and the personal name.


The Sumero-Akkadian name for Jerusalem, uru-salim, is variously etymologised to mean "foundation of [or: by] the god Shalim": from Hebrew/Semitic.


Sometimes this was further folk-etymologised as hand-iron.


channel comes from the Ancient Greek Βόσπορος (Bósporos), which was folk-etymologised as βοὸς πόρος, i.


in Cornwall, the vast majority of place-names in England are easily etymologised as Old English (or Old Norse, due to later Viking influence), demonstrating.


The Rus' names can most readily be etymologised as Old Norse, and have been argued to be older than the Slavic names:.


The Abkhazians call their homeland Аԥсны (Apsny, Aṗsny), popularly etymologised as "a land/country of the soul", yet literally meaning "a country of.



etymologised's Meaning':

give the etymology or derivation or suggest an etymology (for a word

Synonyms:

retrace; reconstruct; construct; etymologize;

Antonyms:

compress; misconception; level;

etymologised's Meaning in Other Sites