среда, 12 августа 2020 г.

RSSMix.com Mix ID 11530258

RSSMix.com Mix ID 11530258


List of academic disciplines

Posted:

Suggestion for inspiration for a CSA unit model, the US Coastal Artillery.

Posted:

mumble */ - English dictionary

Posted:

UK [ˈmʌmb(ə)l] / US verb [intransitive/transitive] Word forms mumble : present tense I/you/we/they mumble he/she/it mumbles present participle mumbling past ...

mycosis - Medical dictionary

Posted:

Any disease caused by a fungus (filamentous or yeast). [myco + G. osis, condition] m. framboesioides SYN: yaws. m. fungoides a chronic progressive lymphoma ...

mumble - Wiktionary

Posted:

1. verb To speak unintelligibly or inaudibly; to fail to articulate. Please try not to mumble so I can hear you better. 2. noun a) A quiet or.

mumble - Dictionary of contemporary English

Posted:

mum|ble [ˈmʌmbəl] v [I and T] [Date: 1300 1400; Origin: From the sound] to say something too quietly or not clearly enough, so that other people cannot ...

mumble - Etymology dictionary

Posted:

{{12}}mumble (v.) early 14c., momelen, "to eat in a slow, ineffective manner" (perhaps "to talk with one's mouth full"), probably frequentative of interjection mum.

mumble - English terms dictionary

Posted:

VERB 1) say something indistinctly and quietly. 2) bite or chew with toothless gums. ▻ NOUN ▫ a quiet and indistinct utterance. ORIGIN from MUM(Cf. ↑mum)

mumble - New thesaurus

Posted:

[v] say low and inarticulately grumble, maunder, murmur, mutter, ramble, rumble, say to oneself, speak, stammer, stutter, swallow, talk, utter, verbalize, vocalize, ...

mumble - English dictionary

Posted:

[t]mʌ̱mb(ə)l[/t]] mumbles, mumbling, mumbled VERB If you mumble, you speak very quietly and not at all clearly with the result that the words are difficult to ...

-mycosis - Medical dictionary

Posted:

a word termination denoting a fungal disease or infection.

mumble */ - English dictionary

Posted:

UK [ˈmʌmb(ə)l] / US verb [intransitive/transitive] Word forms mumble : present tense I/you/we/they mumble he/she/it mumbles present participle mumbling past ...

mycosis - Medical dictionary

Posted:

Any disease caused by a fungus (filamentous or yeast). [myco + G. osis, condition] m. framboesioides SYN: yaws. m. fungoides a chronic progressive lymphoma ...

mumble - Wiktionary

Posted:

1. verb To speak unintelligibly or inaudibly; to fail to articulate. Please try not to mumble so I can hear you better. 2. noun a) A quiet or.

mumble - Dictionary of contemporary English

Posted:

mum|ble [ˈmʌmbəl] v [I and T] [Date: 1300 1400; Origin: From the sound] to say something too quietly or not clearly enough, so that other people cannot ...

mumble - Etymology dictionary

Posted:

{{12}}mumble (v.) early 14c., momelen, "to eat in a slow, ineffective manner" (perhaps "to talk with one's mouth full"), probably frequentative of interjection mum.

mumble - English terms dictionary

Posted:

VERB 1) say something indistinctly and quietly. 2) bite or chew with toothless gums. ▻ NOUN ▫ a quiet and indistinct utterance. ORIGIN from MUM(Cf. ↑mum)

mumble - New thesaurus

Posted:

[v] say low and inarticulately grumble, maunder, murmur, mutter, ramble, rumble, say to oneself, speak, stammer, stutter, swallow, talk, utter, verbalize, vocalize, ...

mumble - English dictionary

Posted:

[t]mʌ̱mb(ə)l[/t]] mumbles, mumbling, mumbled VERB If you mumble, you speak very quietly and not at all clearly with the result that the words are difficult to ...

-mycosis - Medical dictionary

Posted:

a word termination denoting a fungal disease or infection.

mumble */ - English dictionary

Posted:

UK [ˈmʌmb(ə)l] / US verb [intransitive/transitive] Word forms mumble : present tense I/you/we/they mumble he/she/it mumbles present participle mumbling past ...

mycosis - Medical dictionary

Posted:

Any disease caused by a fungus (filamentous or yeast). [myco + G. osis, condition] m. framboesioides SYN: yaws. m. fungoides a chronic progressive lymphoma ...

variable-pitch propeller - Aviation dictionary

Posted:

A propeller whose pitch may be changed when the engine is operating. See feather (ii)

mumble - Wiktionary

Posted:

1. verb To speak unintelligibly or inaudibly; to fail to articulate. Please try not to mumble so I can hear you better. 2. noun a) A quiet or.

mumble - Dictionary of contemporary English

Posted:

mum|ble [ˈmʌmbəl] v [I and T] [Date: 1300 1400; Origin: From the sound] to say something too quietly or not clearly enough, so that other people cannot ...

mumble - Etymology dictionary

Posted:

{{12}}mumble (v.) early 14c., momelen, "to eat in a slow, ineffective manner" (perhaps "to talk with one's mouth full"), probably frequentative of interjection mum.

mumble - English terms dictionary

Posted:

VERB 1) say something indistinctly and quietly. 2) bite or chew with toothless gums. ▻ NOUN ▫ a quiet and indistinct utterance. ORIGIN from MUM(Cf. ↑mum)

mumble - New thesaurus

Posted:

[v] say low and inarticulately grumble, maunder, murmur, mutter, ramble, rumble, say to oneself, speak, stammer, stutter, swallow, talk, utter, verbalize, vocalize, ...

mumble - English dictionary

Posted:

[t]mʌ̱mb(ə)l[/t]] mumbles, mumbling, mumbled VERB If you mumble, you speak very quietly and not at all clearly with the result that the words are difficult to ...

mumble */ - English dictionary

Posted:

UK [ˈmʌmb(ə)l] / US verb [intransitive/transitive] Word forms mumble : present tense I/you/we/they mumble he/she/it mumbles present participle mumbling past ...

mycosis - Medical dictionary

Posted:

Any disease caused by a fungus (filamentous or yeast). [myco + G. osis, condition] m. framboesioides SYN: yaws. m. fungoides a chronic progressive lymphoma ...

mumble - Wiktionary

Posted:

1. verb To speak unintelligibly or inaudibly; to fail to articulate. Please try not to mumble so I can hear you better. 2. noun a) A quiet or.

mumble - Dictionary of contemporary English

Posted:

mum|ble [ˈmʌmbəl] v [I and T] [Date: 1300 1400; Origin: From the sound] to say something too quietly or not clearly enough, so that other people cannot ...

mumble - Etymology dictionary

Posted:

{{12}}mumble (v.) early 14c., momelen, "to eat in a slow, ineffective manner" (perhaps "to talk with one's mouth full"), probably frequentative of interjection mum.

mumble - English terms dictionary

Posted:

VERB 1) say something indistinctly and quietly. 2) bite or chew with toothless gums. ▻ NOUN ▫ a quiet and indistinct utterance. ORIGIN from MUM(Cf. ↑mum)

mumble - New thesaurus

Posted:

[v] say low and inarticulately grumble, maunder, murmur, mutter, ramble, rumble, say to oneself, speak, stammer, stutter, swallow, talk, utter, verbalize, vocalize, ...

mumble - English dictionary

Posted:

[t]mʌ̱mb(ə)l[/t]] mumbles, mumbling, mumbled VERB If you mumble, you speak very quietly and not at all clearly with the result that the words are difficult to ...

-mycosis - Medical dictionary

Posted:

a word termination denoting a fungal disease or infection.

https://english_dictionary.enacademic.com › ...

Posted:

UK [ˈmʌmb(ə)l] / US verb [intransitive/transitive] Word forms mumble : present tense I/you/we/they mumble he/she/it mumbles present participle mumbling past​ ...

https://medicine.enacademic.com › ...

Posted:

Any disease caused by a fungus (filamentous or yeast). [myco + G. osis, condition​] m. framboesioides SYN: yaws. m. fungoides a chronic progressive lymphoma ...

https://wiktionary.enacademic.com › ...

Posted:

1. verb To speak unintelligibly or inaudibly; to fail to articulate. Please try not to mumble so I can hear you better. 2. noun a) A quiet or.

https://contemporary_en.enacademic.com › ...

Posted:

mum|ble [ˈmʌmbəl] v [I and T] [Date: 1300 1400; Origin: From the sound] to say something too quietly or not clearly enough, so that other people cannot ...

https://etymology.enacademic.com › ...

Posted:

{{12}}mumble (v.) early 14c., momelen, "to eat in a slow, ineffective manner" (​perhaps "to talk with one's mouth full"), probably frequentative of interjection mum​.

https://terms_en.enacademic.com › ...

Posted:

VERB 1) say something indistinctly and quietly. 2) bite or chew with toothless gums. ▻ NOUN ▫ a quiet and indistinct utterance. ORIGIN from MUM(Cf. ↑mum​)

https://new_thesaurus.enacademic.com › ...

Posted:

[v] say low and inarticulately grumble, maunder, murmur, mutter, ramble, rumble, say to oneself, speak, stammer, stutter, swallow, talk, utter, verbalize, vocalize, ...

https://english_dic.enacademic.com › ...

Posted:

[t]mʌ̱mb(ə)l[/t]] mumbles, mumbling, mumbled VERB If you mumble, you speak very quietly and not at all clearly with the result that the words are difficult to ...

https://medicine.enacademic.com › ...

Posted:

a word termination denoting a fungal disease or infection.

mumble */ - English dictionary

Posted:

UK [ˈmʌmb(ə)l] / US verb [intransitive/transitive] Word forms mumble : present tense I/you/we/they mumble he/she/it mumbles present participle mumbling past ...

mycosis - Medical dictionary

Posted:

Any disease caused by a fungus (filamentous or yeast). [myco + G. osis, condition] m. framboesioides SYN: yaws. m. fungoides a chronic progressive lymphoma ...

mumble - Wiktionary

Posted:

1. verb To speak unintelligibly or inaudibly; to fail to articulate. Please try not to mumble so I can hear you better. 2. noun a) A quiet or.

mumble - Dictionary of contemporary English

Posted:

mum|ble [ˈmʌmbəl] v [I and T] [Date: 1300 1400; Origin: From the sound] to say something too quietly or not clearly enough, so that other people cannot ...

mumble - Etymology dictionary

Posted:

{{12}}mumble (v.) early 14c., momelen, "to eat in a slow, ineffective manner" (perhaps "to talk with one's mouth full"), probably frequentative of interjection mum.

mumble - English terms dictionary

Posted:

VERB 1) say something indistinctly and quietly. 2) bite or chew with toothless gums. ▻ NOUN ▫ a quiet and indistinct utterance. ORIGIN from MUM(Cf. ↑mum)

mumble - New thesaurus

Posted:

[v] say low and inarticulately grumble, maunder, murmur, mutter, ramble, rumble, say to oneself, speak, stammer, stutter, swallow, talk, utter, verbalize, vocalize, ...

mumble - English dictionary

Posted:

[t]mʌ̱mb(ə)l[/t]] mumbles, mumbling, mumbled VERB If you mumble, you speak very quietly and not at all clearly with the result that the words are difficult to ...

-mycosis - Medical dictionary

Posted:

a word termination denoting a fungal disease or infection.

https://english_dictionary.enacademic.com › ...

Posted:

UK [ˈmʌmb(ə)l] / US verb [intransitive/transitive] Word forms mumble : present tense I/you/we/they mumble he/she/it mumbles present participle mumbling past​ ...

https://medicine.enacademic.com › ...

Posted:

Any disease caused by a fungus (filamentous or yeast). [myco + G. osis, condition​] m. framboesioides SYN: yaws. m. fungoides a chronic progressive lymphoma ...

https://aviation_dictionary.enacademic.com › ...

Posted:

A propeller whose pitch may be changed when the engine is operating. See feather (ii)

https://wiktionary.enacademic.com › ...

Posted:

1. verb To speak unintelligibly or inaudibly; to fail to articulate. Please try not to mumble so I can hear you better. 2. noun a) A quiet or.

https://contemporary_en.enacademic.com › ...

Posted:

mum|ble [ˈmʌmbəl] v [I and T] [Date: 1300 1400; Origin: From the sound] to say something too quietly or not clearly enough, so that other people cannot ...

https://etymology.enacademic.com › ...

Posted:

{{12}}mumble (v.) early 14c., momelen, "to eat in a slow, ineffective manner" (​perhaps "to talk with one's mouth full"), probably frequentative of interjection mum​.

https://terms_en.enacademic.com › ...

Posted:

VERB 1) say something indistinctly and quietly. 2) bite or chew with toothless gums. ▻ NOUN ▫ a quiet and indistinct utterance. ORIGIN from MUM(Cf. ↑mum​)

https://new_thesaurus.enacademic.com › ...

Posted:

[v] say low and inarticulately grumble, maunder, murmur, mutter, ramble, rumble, say to oneself, speak, stammer, stutter, swallow, talk, utter, verbalize, vocalize, ...

https://english_dic.enacademic.com › ...

Posted:

[t]mʌ̱mb(ə)l[/t]] mumbles, mumbling, mumbled VERB If you mumble, you speak very quietly and not at all clearly with the result that the words are difficult to ...

mumble */ - English dictionary

Posted:

UK [ˈmʌmb(ə)l] / US verb [intransitive/transitive] Word forms mumble : present tense I/you/we/they mumble he/she/it mumbles present participle mumbling past ...

mycosis - Medical dictionary

Posted:

Any disease caused by a fungus (filamentous or yeast). [myco + G. osis, condition] m. framboesioides SYN: yaws. m. fungoides a chronic progressive lymphoma ...

mumble - Wiktionary

Posted:

1. verb To speak unintelligibly or inaudibly; to fail to articulate. Please try not to mumble so I can hear you better. 2. noun a) A quiet or.

mumble - Dictionary of contemporary English

Posted:

mum|ble [ˈmʌmbəl] v [I and T] [Date: 1300 1400; Origin: From the sound] to say something too quietly or not clearly enough, so that other people cannot ...

mumble - Etymology dictionary

Posted:

{{12}}mumble (v.) early 14c., momelen, "to eat in a slow, ineffective manner" (perhaps "to talk with one's mouth full"), probably frequentative of interjection mum.

mumble - English terms dictionary

Posted:

VERB 1) say something indistinctly and quietly. 2) bite or chew with toothless gums. ▻ NOUN ▫ a quiet and indistinct utterance. ORIGIN from MUM(Cf. ↑mum)

mumble - New thesaurus

Posted:

[v] say low and inarticulately grumble, maunder, murmur, mutter, ramble, rumble, say to oneself, speak, stammer, stutter, swallow, talk, utter, verbalize, vocalize, ...

mumble - English dictionary

Posted:

[t]mʌ̱mb(ə)l[/t]] mumbles, mumbling, mumbled VERB If you mumble, you speak very quietly and not at all clearly with the result that the words are difficult to ...

-mycosis - Medical dictionary

Posted:

a word termination denoting a fungal disease or infection.

mumble */ - English dictionary

Posted:

UK [ˈmʌmb(ə)l] / US verb [intransitive/transitive] Word forms mumble : present tense I/you/we/they mumble he/she/it mumbles present participle mumbling past ...

mycosis - Medical dictionary

Posted:

Any disease caused by a fungus (filamentous or yeast). [myco + G. osis, condition] m. framboesioides SYN: yaws. m. fungoides a chronic progressive lymphoma ...

mumble - Wiktionary

Posted:

1. verb To speak unintelligibly or inaudibly; to fail to articulate. Please try not to mumble so I can hear you better. 2. noun a) A quiet or.

mumble - Dictionary of contemporary English

Posted:

mum|ble [ˈmʌmbəl] v [I and T] [Date: 1300 1400; Origin: From the sound] to say something too quietly or not clearly enough, so that other people cannot ...

mumble - Etymology dictionary

Posted:

{{12}}mumble (v.) early 14c., momelen, "to eat in a slow, ineffective manner" (perhaps "to talk with one's mouth full"), probably frequentative of interjection mum.

mumble - English terms dictionary

Posted:

VERB 1) say something indistinctly and quietly. 2) bite or chew with toothless gums. ▻ NOUN ▫ a quiet and indistinct utterance. ORIGIN from MUM(Cf. ↑mum)

mumble - New thesaurus

Posted:

[v] say low and inarticulately grumble, maunder, murmur, mutter, ramble, rumble, say to oneself, speak, stammer, stutter, swallow, talk, utter, verbalize, vocalize, ...

mumble - English dictionary

Posted:

[t]mʌ̱mb(ə)l[/t]] mumbles, mumbling, mumbled VERB If you mumble, you speak very quietly and not at all clearly with the result that the words are difficult to ...

-mycosis - Medical dictionary

Posted:

a word termination denoting a fungal disease or infection.

mumble */ - English dictionary

Posted:

UK [ˈmʌmb(ə)l] / US verb [intransitive/transitive] Word forms mumble : present tense I/you/we/they mumble he/she/it mumbles present participle mumbling past ...

mycosis - Medical dictionary

Posted:

Any disease caused by a fungus (filamentous or yeast). [myco + G. osis, condition] m. framboesioides SYN: yaws. m. fungoides a chronic progressive lymphoma ...

mumble - Wiktionary

Posted:

1. verb To speak unintelligibly or inaudibly; to fail to articulate. Please try not to mumble so I can hear you better. 2. noun a) A quiet or.

mumble - Dictionary of contemporary English

Posted:

mum|ble [ˈmʌmbəl] v [I and T] [Date: 1300 1400; Origin: From the sound] to say something too quietly or not clearly enough, so that other people cannot ...

mumble - Etymology dictionary

Posted:

{{12}}mumble (v.) early 14c., momelen, "to eat in a slow, ineffective manner" (perhaps "to talk with one's mouth full"), probably frequentative of interjection mum.

mumble - English terms dictionary

Posted:

VERB 1) say something indistinctly and quietly. 2) bite or chew with toothless gums. ▻ NOUN ▫ a quiet and indistinct utterance. ORIGIN from MUM(Cf. ↑mum)

mumble - New thesaurus

Posted:

[v] say low and inarticulately grumble, maunder, murmur, mutter, ramble, rumble, say to oneself, speak, stammer, stutter, swallow, talk, utter, verbalize, vocalize, ...

mumble - English dictionary

Posted:

[t]mʌ̱mb(ə)l[/t]] mumbles, mumbling, mumbled VERB If you mumble, you speak very quietly and not at all clearly with the result that the words are difficult to ...

-mycosis - Medical dictionary

Posted:

a word termination denoting a fungal disease or infection.

mumble */ - English dictionary

Posted:

UK [ˈmʌmb(ə)l] / US verb [intransitive/transitive] Word forms mumble : present tense I/you/we/they mumble he/she/it mumbles present participle mumbling past ...

mycosis - Medical dictionary

Posted:

Any disease caused by a fungus (filamentous or yeast). [myco + G. osis, condition] m. framboesioides SYN: yaws. m. fungoides a chronic progressive lymphoma ...

Balmaghie - A Topographical dictionary of Scotland

Posted:

BALMAGHIE, a parish, in the stewartry of Kirkcudbright, 4 miles (N. W.) from Castle Douglas; containing 1252 inhabitants, of whom 275 are in the village of ...

mumble - Wiktionary

Posted:

1. verb To speak unintelligibly or inaudibly; to fail to articulate. Please try not to mumble so I can hear you better. 2. noun a) A quiet or.

mumble - Dictionary of contemporary English

Posted:

mum|ble [ˈmʌmbəl] v [I and T] [Date: 1300 1400; Origin: From the sound] to say something too quietly or not clearly enough, so that other people cannot ...

mumble - Etymology dictionary

Posted:

{{12}}mumble (v.) early 14c., momelen, "to eat in a slow, ineffective manner" (perhaps "to talk with one's mouth full"), probably frequentative of interjection mum.

mumble - English terms dictionary

Posted:

VERB 1) say something indistinctly and quietly. 2) bite or chew with toothless gums. ▻ NOUN ▫ a quiet and indistinct utterance. ORIGIN from MUM(Cf. ↑mum)

mumble - New thesaurus

Posted:

[v] say low and inarticulately grumble, maunder, murmur, mutter, ramble, rumble, say to oneself, speak, stammer, stutter, swallow, talk, utter, verbalize, vocalize, ...

mumble - English dictionary

Posted:

[t]mʌ̱mb(ə)l[/t]] mumbles, mumbling, mumbled VERB If you mumble, you speak very quietly and not at all clearly with the result that the words are difficult to ...

mumble */ - English dictionary

Posted:

UK [ˈmʌmb(ə)l] / US verb [intransitive/transitive] Word forms mumble : present tense I/you/we/they mumble he/she/it mumbles present participle mumbling past ...

mycosis - Medical dictionary

Posted:

Any disease caused by a fungus (filamentous or yeast). [myco + G. osis, condition] m. framboesioides SYN: yaws. m. fungoides a chronic progressive lymphoma ...

mumble - Wiktionary

Posted:

1. verb To speak unintelligibly or inaudibly; to fail to articulate. Please try not to mumble so I can hear you better. 2. noun a) A quiet or.

mumble - Dictionary of contemporary English

Posted:

mum|ble [ˈmʌmbəl] v [I and T] [Date: 1300 1400; Origin: From the sound] to say something too quietly or not clearly enough, so that other people cannot ...

mumble - Etymology dictionary

Posted:

{{12}}mumble (v.) early 14c., momelen, "to eat in a slow, ineffective manner" (perhaps "to talk with one's mouth full"), probably frequentative of interjection mum.

mumble - English terms dictionary

Posted:

VERB 1) say something indistinctly and quietly. 2) bite or chew with toothless gums. ▻ NOUN ▫ a quiet and indistinct utterance. ORIGIN from MUM(Cf. ↑mum)

mumble - New thesaurus

Posted:

[v] say low and inarticulately grumble, maunder, murmur, mutter, ramble, rumble, say to oneself, speak, stammer, stutter, swallow, talk, utter, verbalize, vocalize, ...

Suggestion for inspiration for a CSA unit model, the US Coastal Artillery.

Posted:

https://english_dictionary.enacademic.com › ...

Posted:

UK [ˈmʌmb(ə)l] / US verb [intransitive/transitive] Word forms mumble : present tense I/you/we/they mumble he/she/it mumbles present participle mumbling past​ ...

https://medicine.enacademic.com › ...

Posted:

Any disease caused by a fungus (filamentous or yeast). [myco + G. osis, condition​] m. framboesioides SYN: yaws. m. fungoides a chronic progressive lymphoma ...

https://wiktionary.enacademic.com › ...

Posted:

1. verb To speak unintelligibly or inaudibly; to fail to articulate. Please try not to mumble so I can hear you better. 2. noun a) A quiet or.

https://contemporary_en.enacademic.com › ...

Posted:

mum|ble [ˈmʌmbəl] v [I and T] [Date: 1300 1400; Origin: From the sound] to say something too quietly or not clearly enough, so that other people cannot ...

https://etymology.enacademic.com › ...

Posted:

{{12}}mumble (v.) early 14c., momelen, "to eat in a slow, ineffective manner" (​perhaps "to talk with one's mouth full"), probably frequentative of interjection mum​.

https://terms_en.enacademic.com › ...

Posted:

VERB 1) say something indistinctly and quietly. 2) bite or chew with toothless gums. ▻ NOUN ▫ a quiet and indistinct utterance. ORIGIN from MUM(Cf. ↑mum​)

https://new_thesaurus.enacademic.com › ...

Posted:

[v] say low and inarticulately grumble, maunder, murmur, mutter, ramble, rumble, say to oneself, speak, stammer, stutter, swallow, talk, utter, verbalize, vocalize, ...

https://english_dic.enacademic.com › ...

Posted:

[t]mʌ̱mb(ə)l[/t]] mumbles, mumbling, mumbled VERB If you mumble, you speak very quietly and not at all clearly with the result that the words are difficult to ...

new_terms.enacademic.com › ...

Posted:

[ dʌpi] noun (plural duppies) W. Indian a malevolent spirit or ghost. Origin C18: prob. of W. Afr. origin.

https://english_dictionary.enacademic.com › ...

Posted:

UK [ˈmʌmb(ə)l] / US verb [intransitive/transitive] Word forms mumble : present tense I/you/we/they mumble he/she/it mumbles present participle mumbling past​ ...

https://medicine.enacademic.com › ...

Posted:

Any disease caused by a fungus (filamentous or yeast). [myco + G. osis, condition​] m. framboesioides SYN: yaws. m. fungoides a chronic progressive lymphoma ...

https://wiktionary.enacademic.com › ...

Posted:

1. verb To speak unintelligibly or inaudibly; to fail to articulate. Please try not to mumble so I can hear you better. 2. noun a) A quiet or.

https://contemporary_en.enacademic.com › ...

Posted:

mum|ble [ˈmʌmbəl] v [I and T] [Date: 1300 1400; Origin: From the sound] to say something too quietly or not clearly enough, so that other people cannot ...

https://etymology.enacademic.com › ...

Posted:

{{12}}mumble (v.) early 14c., momelen, "to eat in a slow, ineffective manner" (​perhaps "to talk with one's mouth full"), probably frequentative of interjection mum​.

https://terms_en.enacademic.com › ...

Posted:

VERB 1) say something indistinctly and quietly. 2) bite or chew with toothless gums. ▻ NOUN ▫ a quiet and indistinct utterance. ORIGIN from MUM(Cf. ↑mum​)

https://new_thesaurus.enacademic.com › ...

Posted:

[v] say low and inarticulately grumble, maunder, murmur, mutter, ramble, rumble, say to oneself, speak, stammer, stutter, swallow, talk, utter, verbalize, vocalize, ...

https://english_dic.enacademic.com › ...

Posted:

[t]mʌ̱mb(ə)l[/t]] mumbles, mumbling, mumbled VERB If you mumble, you speak very quietly and not at all clearly with the result that the words are difficult to ...

https://medicine.enacademic.com › ...

Posted:

a word termination denoting a fungal disease or infection.

Medicine, History of

Posted:

• Presents the history of modern medical science from its Greek foundation Catholic Encyclopedia. Kevin Knight.

rhosus from latin to russian | Academic Dictionaries and Encyclopedias

Posted:

Translation — rhosus — from latin — to russian — 1...

rpd dmia from russian to english

Posted:

Remember this site. All languages Abkhaz Adyghe Afrikaans Ainu Akan Albanian Alsatian Altaic Arabic Aragonese Armenian Aromanian Asturian Aymara Azerbaijani Bagobo Bashkir Basque Belarusian...

Комментариев нет:

Отправить комментарий

webmention

Infocourt

News digest

Together digest