Stagh

Stagh
starci

Mini Vocabolario milanese italiano . 2007.

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  • stagnation — (stagh na sion ; en vers, de quatre syllabes) s. f. 1°   État de ce qui est stagnant. La stagnation des eaux. 2°   État du sang et des humeurs qui ne coulent pas ou qui circulent trop lentement, par analogie avec les eaux qui croupissent dans les …   Dictionnaire de la Langue Française d'Émile Littré

  • stagner — (stagh né) v. n. Être stagnant. •   Dans d autres endroits, l eau grise stagnait sur le sable gris, TH. GAUTIER Journ. offic. 19 mars 1870, Feuilleton.. ÉTYMOLOGIE    Voy. stagnant …   Dictionnaire de la Langue Française d'Émile Littré

  • stagnicole — (stagh ni ko l ) adj. Terme d histoire naturelle. Qui vit dans les étangs. ÉTYMOLOGIE    Lat. stagnum, étang, et colere, habiter …   Dictionnaire de la Langue Française d'Émile Littré

  • Jan Guillou — Infobox Writer name = Jan Oscar Sverre Lucien Henri Guillou imagesize = caption = Jan Guillou at the Göteborg Book Fair in 2005. pseudonym = birthdate = birth date and age|1944|1|17|df=y birthplace = Södertälje, Sweden deathdate = deathplac… …   Wikipedia

  • stagnant — stagnant, ante (stagh nan, nan t ) adj. 1°   En parlant des eaux, qui ne coule point. •   Lé pays d Aunis a autrefois été submergé par la mer et par les eaux stagnantes des marais ; c est une des terres les plus nouvelles de la France, BUFF. Add …   Dictionnaire de la Langue Française d'Émile Littré

  • stay — English has three distinct words stay, two of them ultimately from the same source. Stay ‘stop’ [15] comes from estai , the present stem of Old French ester ‘stand, stop’. This in turn went back to Latin stāre ‘stand’ (source of English state,… …   The Hutchinson dictionary of word origins

  • steel — [OE] Steel is etymologically a ‘firm’ substance. The word goes back to a prehistoric West Germanic *stakhlam, which was derived from the Germanic base *stakh , *stagh ‘be firm’ (source also of English stay ‘rope, support’). It has Germanic… …   The Hutchinson dictionary of word origins

  • stay — English has three distinct words stay, two of them ultimately from the same source. Stay ‘stop’ [15] comes from estai , the present stem of Old French ester ‘stand, stop’. This in turn went back to Latin stāre ‘stand’ (source of English state,… …   Word origins

  • steel — [OE] Steel is etymologically a ‘firm’ substance. The word goes back to a prehistoric West Germanic *stakhlam, which was derived from the Germanic base *stakh , *stagh ‘be firm’ (source also of English stay ‘rope, support’). It has Germanic… …   Word origins

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