

"that which is spoken" "verb"): epirrhema ( "adverb") L verbum ( "word verb"): LaL adverbium ( lit.
"added on"), Gk epitheton ( "something added," adjective often used as noun), L epitheton, MF épithète, E epithet PIE *dhe- ( "to put, place do, make"): Gk tithenai ( "to put"), Gk epithetos ( "attributed, added," lit."that which is added"): S adjetivo, I aggettivo, F adjectif, C adjectiu, G Sw adjektiv, E adjective PIE *ye- ( "to do"): L iacere ( "to throw"), L adicere: L adjectivum ( lit.
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verb, Val Valencian Catalan, VL Vulgar Latin, Wel Welsh, WGmc West Germanic present participle, Pru Prussian, R Russian, Rç Romániço, Ro Romanian, S Spanish, Sa Sardinian, Sk Sanskrit, Slo Slovak, Sr Serbian, Sum Sumerian, Sw Swedish, Toc Tocarian, tr. Old., Oc Occitan, ON Old Norse, Osc Oscan, OSla Old Slavonic, P Portuguese, Pers Persian, PGmc Proto-Germanic, Phoe Phoenician, PIE Proto-Indoeuropean, Po Polish, pp. Middle…, MedL Medieval Latin, ModGk Modern Greek, ModL Modern Latin, n. intransitive, Ir Irish, L Latin, LaL Late Latin, Lat Latvian, Let Lettish, Lf Lingua Franca Nova, Lit Lithuanian, lit. genitive, Gk Greek, Gl Glosa, Gmc Germanic Got Gothic, Heb Hebrew, Hit Hittite, I Italian, Ia Interlingua, Ic Icelandic, Id Ido, Ie Interlingue, Ig Interglossa, In Idiom Neutral, intr. especially, Est Estonian, F French, Fin Finnish, Fle Flemish, Fra Frankish, G German, Gae Gaelic, Gau Gaulish, gen. demonstrative, Dia Dialectal, Du Dutch, E English, Es Esperanto, esp. conjunction, Cro Croatian, Da Danish, dem. adverb, AF Anglo-French, Alb Albanian, AmE American English, Arab Arabic, Arc Arcadian, Arme Armenian, Ave Avestan, Bal Balearic Catalan, BrE British English, Bre Breton, C Catalan, c. A Concise English-Interlingua Dictionary.Britannica World Language Dictionary Part II – English to Other Languages (French, German, Italian, Spanish, Swedish, Yiddish).Dictionary of Romaniczo ( a former version including translations to English, French, Spanish, Italian, Portuguese, German, Danish, Dutch, Swedish, Esperanto, Ido, and Gode’s Interlingua).Etymonline (whose main sources: Weekley Klein Barnhart Holthausen Kipfer & Champman The Oxford English Dictionary).Some points may look a bit messy this work is expected to get tidier as it grows. ETYMOLOGICAL DICTIONARY OF SEVERAL NATURAL AND ARTIFICIAL LANGUAGES.
