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word and anathema
Following the canons of the holy fathers, we absolutely and under penalty of anathema forbid laymen to remove the offerings from the altars of the churches of St. Peter, of The Savior ( Lateran Basilica ), of St. Mary Rotund, in a word, from the altars of any of the churches or from the crosses.
The word " anathema " comes from Koine Greek " ἀνάθεμα " as " something dedicated, especially dedicated to evil " from " ἀνατίθημι " ( anatithēmi, " offer as a votive gift ", from ἀνά ana, " on " + τίθημι tithēmi, " I put ").
Because the Greek word anathema meant things offered to God, it was used to translate the Hebrew word herem in such contexts.
' In the Septuagint the form anathema is generally used as the rendering of the Hebrew word herem, derived from a verb which means ( 1 ) to consecrate or devote ; and ( 2 ) to exterminate.
The Hebrew word therefore carried the idea of devoted to destruction (; ); and hence a majority of scholars have treated the word anathema similarly, generally as meaning a thing accursed.
In the New Testament the word anathema often implies denouncement and banishment.
Sometimes, however, the word anathema in the New Testament invokes an alternative meaning, that of being " offered up to God ".

word and might
I felt that he looked at me coldly and appraisingly and seemed to be uncertain what his attitude towards me should be, but he did not say one word which might indicate that he had been told of advances to his wife.
I fled, however, not from what might have been the natural fear of being unable to disguise from you that the things about my bridegroom -- in the sense you meant the word `` things '' -- which you had been galvanizing yourself to tell me as a painful part of your maternal duty were things which I had already insisted upon finding out for myself ( despite, I may now say, the unspeakable awkwardness of making the discovery on principle, yes, on principle, and in cold blood ) because I was resolved, as a modern woman, not to be a mollycoddle waiting for Life but to seize Life by the throat.
Promptly their livestock was taken and according to Gorton the soldiers were ordered to knock down anyone who should utter a word of insolence, and run through anyone who might step out of line.
It might be added that as he kept his word so he expected that others keep theirs.
From the point of view of word formation real might be expected to have two syllables.
An attempted middle course might lead to devices like a 5000-word alphabetized dictionary from which every fiftieth word was selected.
He might barge into a gallery, start haggling over prices without so much as a word of greeting.
We must not permit our society to become a slave to the scientific age, as might well happen without the cultural and spiritual restraint that comes from the development of the human mind through wisdom absorbed from the written word.
Otherwise, according to Thai pronunciation rules, the word might be pronounced more like " bean ".
It might be connected to the Germanic word belt, a name used for two of the Danish straits, the Belts, while others claim it to be derived from Latin balteus ( belt ).
A connection between Bragi and the bragarfull ' promise cup ' is sometimes suggested, as bragafull, an alternate form of the word, might be translated as ' Bragi's cup '.
One might also call them bodies, or physical particulars, or concrete things, or matter, or maybe substances ( but bear in mind the word ' substance ' has some special philosophical meanings ).
" One Cree speaker suggested the original word that became corrupted to Eskimo might indeed have been askamiciw ( which means " he eats it raw "), and the Inuit are referred to in some Cree texts as askipiw ( which means " eats something raw ").
" And if profanity is undesirable, a person might simply forgo the offensive word, such as saying, " Kiss my you-know-what!
" Moved by a faith like that of Abraham ( Romans 4: 17, Hebrews 11: 19 ), Elijah prays that God might restore her son so that the veracity and trustworthiness of God's word might be demonstrated.
The implication of the phrase was that the word " sport " defined an activity in which one might be killed.
Pope Eugenius III did not, as Eleanor had hoped, grant an annulment ; instead, he attempted to reconcile Eleanor and Louis, confirming the legality of their marriage, and proclaiming that no word could be spoken against it, and that it might not be dissolved under any pretext.
The distinction between regular kana and the smaller character forms, which are used in regular orthography to mark such things as gemination and palatalization, is often not made in furigana: for example, the usual hiragana spelling of the word ( kyakka ) is, but in furigana it might be written.
For instance, the word " birthdate " might be glossed in furigana as 「 バースデイト 」, which corresponds to an imperfect pronunciation like " baasudeito ".
One might write the kanji for " blue ", but use katakana to write the pronunciation of the English word " blue "; this may be done, for example, in Japanese subtitles on foreign films, where it can help associate the written Japanese with the sounds actually being spoken by the actors, or it may be used in a translation of a work of fiction to enable the translator to preserve the original sound of a proper name ( such as " Firebolt " in the Harry Potter series ) in furigana, while simultaneously indicating its meaning with kanji.
To clarify that for the reader, the word furusato ( hometown ) might be written in hiragana over the kanji for chikyuu ( Earth ).
The word was frequently used by Gorbachev to specify the policies he believed might help reduce the corruption at the top of the Communist Party and the Soviet government, and moderate the abuse of administrative power in the Central Committee.
" I'm sure that there was no stipulation on the placement of " gry " because I recall someone suggesting that it might occur at the boundary of a compound word.
For example, Old Norse poets might replace sverð, the regular word for “ sword ”, with a more abstract compound such as “ wound-hoe ” ( Egill Skallagrímsson: Höfuðlausn 8 ), or a genitive phrase such as randa íss “ ice of shields ” ( Einarr Skúlason: ‘ Øxarflokkr ’ 9 ).

word and suggest
But when a board of inquiry was called to look into the charges of cowardice made against him, the men who had seen Reno leave the battlefield and the officer who had heard Reno suggest that the wounded be left to be tortured by the Sioux, refused to say a harsh word against him.
" Without a clear Sinhala connection, they suggest one from the Tamil language instead: anai-kondra ( anaik-konda ), meaning " which killed an elephant .” Per National Geographic, the word anaconda comes from the Tamil word anaikolra, which means elephant killer.
Scholars also suggest that the Deuteronomists also included the humorous and sometimes disparaging commentary found in the book such as the story of the Ephraimite who could not pronounce the word " shibboleth " correctly ( Judg.
A breathy-voiced phonation ( not actually a fricative, as a literal reading of the IPA chart would suggest ) can sometimes be heard as an allophone of English between vowels, e. g. in the word behind, for some speakers.
While folk etymology identifies it with " cape ", other suggestions suggest it to be connected to the Latin word caput (" head "), and thus explain it as meaning " chief " or " big head ".
Noting that using a word with caca in it to describe a thick, brown beverage would not have gone over well with most speakers of Spanish due to the fact that caca means faeces in Spanish, the Coes suggest that the Spanish colonisers combined the Nahuatl atl with the Yucatec Maya chocol, for unlike the Aztec, the Maya tended to drink chocolate heated.
Others suggest that Essene is a transliteration of the Hebrew word Chitzonim ( chitzon = outside ), which the Mishna ( e. g. Megila 4: 8 ) uses to describe various sectarian groups.
In this context it is also recorded that in the south of Scotland, for example Roxburghshire, there is no < m >, the word thus being Hunganay, which could suggest the < m > is intrusive.
Some authors reject both the French and Goidelic theories and instead suggest that the ultimate source both for the Norman French, Scots and Goidelic variants of this word are to be found in a common Norse root.
In Brazil, folklorists suggest that the word samba is a corruption of the Kikongo word Semba, translated as umbigada in Portuguese, meaning " a blow struck with the belly button ".
When the word tour and the suffixes – ism and – ist are combined, they suggest the action of movement around a circle.
However other Jewish sources accept that the fact that there are various names of God used in the Hebrew Bible, and that Elohim is a plural word may suggest a polytheistic origin.
I had already used the obvious word hypothesis in the sequence hypothesis, and in addition I wanted to suggest that this new assumption was more central and more powerful.
Research on the distribution of place names that include fuji as a part also suggest the origin of the word fuji is in the Yamato language rather than Ainu.
However, most modern references suggest it is adapted from the Sanskrit word úpala.
Other sources suggest that the fictional village's name was constructed from the Celtic word " briga ", which means " town " ( such as in the old city names of Segobriga and Brigantium ) and the Scottish Gaelic " dùn ", which means a fort.
The Oxford English Dictionary suggests that the word derives from " attire ", while other sources suggest a connection with the verb " to tie ".
The Vulgate translates this phrase as in terram visionis (" in the land of vision ") which implies that Jerome was familiar with the reading " Moreh ", a Hebrew word whose consonants suggest " vision.
The drawer chooses a card out of a deck of special Pictionary cards and tries to draw pictures which suggest the word printed on the card.
But others suggest that this is a folk etymology, and that the word actually comes from a Semitic language.
* metonymy: Substitution of an associated word to suggest what is really meant
On the other hand, the variants " Eleuthia " ( Cretan ) and " Eleuthō " ( used by Pindar ) suggest a possible connection with " eleutheria " ( freedom ), in which case the word may simply mean " Deliverer ", with an obvious association to childbirth.

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