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1 dhe
I.mearthII.mgroundIII.mlandIV.msoil -
2 DHE
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3 Dhe tani do të të rrëfej një histori.
I'm going to tell you a story.Albanian-English dictionary > Dhe tani do të të rrëfej një histori.
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4 DHE potential
Англо-русский словарь промышленной и научной лексики > DHE potential
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5 DHE reference
Англо-русский словарь промышленной и научной лексики > DHE reference
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6 Harry Potter dhe guri filozofal
Harry Potter and the Philosopher's Stone [Br.] [J. K. Rowling]Albanian-English dictionary > Harry Potter dhe guri filozofal
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7 kall në dhe
I.to buryII.to inter -
8 Ngjishuni dhe ca.
Sit closer together. -
9 shtie në dhe
to bury -
10 धे
dhe
aor. - adhāt AV. X, 4, 26 ;
adhāsīt, orᅠ adadhat Pāṇ. 2-4, 78; III, 1, 49 ;
Prcc. dheyāt, VI, 4, 67 ;
fut. dhāsyati MBh., dhātā Gr.;
dat. inf. dhā́tave RV. ;
ind. p. dhītvā́ andᅠ -dhī́ya ṠBr. ;
- dhāya Gr.) to suck, drink, suck orᅠ drink in, take to one's self, absorb, appropriate RV. etc. etc.:
Pass. dhīyate Gr.:
Caus. dhāpáyāte (cf. Pāṇ. 1-3, 89 Vārtt. 1 Pat.)
to give suck, nourish RV. ;
- ti ṠBr. (cf. anu- dhe);
aor. adīdhapat Gr.:
Desid. dhitsati Pāṇ. 7-4, 54:
Intens. dedhīyate, dādheti, andᅠ dādhāti
+ cf. Gk. θήσασθαι, γαλαθηνύς, θηλή;
Lat. fē-lare;
Goth. dadd-jan;
Germ. tā-an, tā-jan
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11 dihydroergotamine
1) Medicine: DHE2) Physiology: DHE-45 (another term for DHE - an anti-migraine drug) -
12 do
Ito, Irish do, Old Irish do, du, Cornish dhe, Old Breton do, Breton da; English to, Anglo-Saxon tó, German zu; Latin -do ( endo, indu); Greek $$G-de. Stokes derives the prep do from the verbal particle do, to. See do.IIa verbal particle denoting "to, ad", Irish do, Old Irish do-, du-, also to-, when it carries the accent (e.g. dobiur, I give, *do-bérô, but tabair, give, *tó-bere; Welsh du-, dy-, y. Cf. Gat. du, to prep. and prefix, for *þ;u?III -
13 θεσμός
Grammatical information: m.Meaning: `settled agreement, law, custom' (ψ 196).Compounds: Compp., e. g. θεσμο-θέται, ἔνθεσμος.Derivatives: θέσμιος, τέθμιος, θέθμιος `lawful, customary' (IA. Dor. etc.); θεσμοσύνη `lawfulness' (AP).Etymology: Comparison with synonymous OIr. deidmea, Welsh deddf f. (Thurneysen KZ 51, 57f., Loth Rev. celt. 45, 184) requires an IE protoform * dhedhmo-, -ā-, either with reduplication from * dhe-dh-m-o- (- dh- zero grade of θη- in θή-σ-ω etc.?) or from * dhe-dhm-o- (- dhm- zero grade of θεμ- in θέμις etc.); s. Schwyzer 492 n. 12. θε- could be the same form as in θέ-σις a. o., with suffixes - θμ- or - σμ-; the regular breath dissimilation was in θεθμός removed through influence of θέσις.Page in Frisk: 1,667Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > θεσμός
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14 θην
Grammatical information: pcleOrigin: XX [etym. unknown]Etymology: Unexplained. Acc. to Prellwitz Wb. acc. of a root noun *θή `deed' (IE * dhē) and cognate with Alb. dot `not at all' (after Pedersen BB 20, 236 \< IE * dhē-tim).Page in Frisk: 1,671Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > θην
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15 ὄα
ὄα, ὄη 1.Grammatical information: f.Meaning: `elderberry tree, mountain ash, Sorbus domestica' (Thphr.);Origin: IE [Indo-European]X [probably] [297] *ei-\/oi-wā `yew'Etymology: Words, that resemble in form and meaning, are found in many languages. Thus Lat. ūva f. `grape', which like ὄα can go back on IE *oiu̯ā; a derivation of this is supposed in Arm. aigi `vine' (from *oiu̯-ii̯ā). One compared also the Baltic name of the alder buckthorn, Lith. (j)ievà, Latv. iẽva f., with which seems to agree a Slavic name of the willow, e.g. Russ. íva f. This leads again to the Celtogerman. word for `yew' (taxus), e.g. Ir. eo m., OHG. iwa f.; here further OPr. iuwis `yew'. -- Whether these words have a common origin, whether we must reckon with old loans, remains uncertain. For common origin e.g. WP. 1, 165, also Pok. 297f. (orig. colour-adj. `reddish, motley' with unproven further combinations), Specht Ursprung 63 a. 205 (also quite hypothetical). Further lit. also in W.-Hofmann, Fraenkel and Vasmer s. vv., further Bonfante Emer. 2, 287 f. -- From Gr. ὄα, οἴη comes Alb. vo-dhë, va-dhë (Jokl Untersuchungen 207 ff).Page in Frisk: 2,343Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > ὄα
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16 ὄη 1
ὄα, ὄη 1.Grammatical information: f.Meaning: `elderberry tree, mountain ash, Sorbus domestica' (Thphr.);Origin: IE [Indo-European]X [probably] [297] *ei-\/oi-wā `yew'Etymology: Words, that resemble in form and meaning, are found in many languages. Thus Lat. ūva f. `grape', which like ὄα can go back on IE *oiu̯ā; a derivation of this is supposed in Arm. aigi `vine' (from *oiu̯-ii̯ā). One compared also the Baltic name of the alder buckthorn, Lith. (j)ievà, Latv. iẽva f., with which seems to agree a Slavic name of the willow, e.g. Russ. íva f. This leads again to the Celtogerman. word for `yew' (taxus), e.g. Ir. eo m., OHG. iwa f.; here further OPr. iuwis `yew'. -- Whether these words have a common origin, whether we must reckon with old loans, remains uncertain. For common origin e.g. WP. 1, 165, also Pok. 297f. (orig. colour-adj. `reddish, motley' with unproven further combinations), Specht Ursprung 63 a. 205 (also quite hypothetical). Further lit. also in W.-Hofmann, Fraenkel and Vasmer s. vv., further Bonfante Emer. 2, 287 f. -- From Gr. ὄα, οἴη comes Alb. vo-dhë, va-dhë (Jokl Untersuchungen 207 ff).Page in Frisk: 2,343Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > ὄη 1
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17 Diabetes Health Exposition
Non-profit-making organization: DHEУниверсальный русско-английский словарь > Diabetes Health Exposition
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18 Dump Heat Exchangers
Универсальный русско-английский словарь > Dump Heat Exchangers
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19 data handling equipment
Military: DHEУниверсальный русско-английский словарь > data handling equipment
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20 dihematoporphyrin ether
Optics: DHEУниверсальный русско-английский словарь > dihematoporphyrin ether
См. также в других словарях:
dhē-2 — dhē 2 English meaning: to put, place Deutsche Übersetzung: ‘setzen, stellen, legen” Material: O.Ind. dádhüti, Av. daδüiti “ he places “, O.Pers. Impf. sg. adadü “ he has installed “, O.Ind. Aor.á dhü m “I placed”, Med. 3. sg.… … Proto-Indo-European etymological dictionary
DHE — steht für: Diffie Hellman Schlüsselaustausch Delmenhorst Harpstedter Eisenbahn Dihydroergotamin Design Human Engineering, eine Methodologie psychologischer Einflussnahme, die von Richard Bandler entwickelt wurde. Dhe bezeichnet: den Sindhi… … Deutsch Wikipedia
dhe — dhe·gi·ha; sa·dhe; … English syllables
dhē-3, dhǝ- — dhē 3, dhǝ English meaning: to disappear Deutsche Übersetzung: “hinschwinden”? Material: Lat. famēs f. “hunger”, ad fatim, affatim “ad lassitudinem, zur Genũge”, fatīgō “hetze ab, ermũde”, fatīscō, or “gehe auseinander;… … Proto-Indo-European etymological dictionary
DHE — can refer to: Dihydroergotamine Design Human Engineering, a methodology of psychological influence developed by Richard Bandler. Diffie Hellman key exchange, a method in public key cryptography. This disambiguation page lists articles associated… … Wikipedia
Dhe|gi|ha — «DAY gee hah», noun. a division of the Siouan stock of North American Indians … Useful english dictionary
dhē(i)- — To suck. Contracted from *dheə₁(i) . Derivatives include female, fawn2, fetus, fennel, and affiliate. 1. Suffixed reduced form *dhē mnā . female, feme, feminine; effeminate, from Latin … Universalium
dhē- — To set, put. Contracted from *dheə₁ . Derivatives include deed, doom, fashion, defeat, feckless, sacrifice, satisfy, face, and synthesis. I. Basic form … Universalium
DHE-45 — dihydroergotamine (another term for DHE an anti migraine drug) (Medical » Physiology) … Abbreviations dictionary
dhē(i)- (besides dh-ei-?) — dhē(i) (besides dh ei ?) English meaning: to suck Deutsche Übersetzung: ‘saugen, säugen” Note: (: dhǝi , dhī̆ and dhē , dhǝ ) s. esp. Schulze KZ. 27, 425 = Kl. Schr. 363. Material: O.Ind. dhüya ḥ “ nourishing, nursing “,… … Proto-Indo-European etymological dictionary
dhē-1, redupl. dhē-dh(ē)- — dhē 1, redupl. dhē dh(ē) English meaning: child word for “grandparents” Deutsche Übersetzung: Lallwort der Kindersprache for ältere Familienglieder Material: Gk. θεῖος “uncle”, θεία “aunt” (*θη ος, θη ᾱ), τήθη “grandmother” (from … Proto-Indo-European etymological dictionary