;/ .... ;)
Not to be funny but ' them hoez late ! ' lmao . Seen .
wheiyait a minute, where does the word ' late ' stem from ?
lmao .
just glance over the link cover . and then .... click that shit .
late (adj.) O.E. læt "occurring after the customary or expected time," originally "slow, sluggish," from P.Gmc. *lata- (cf. O.N. latr "sluggish, lazy," M.Du., O.S. lat, Ger. laß "idle, weary," Goth. lats "weary, sluggish, lazy," latjan "to hinder"), from PIE *led- "slow, weary" (cf. L. lassus "faint, weary, languid, exhausted," Gk. ledein "to be weary"), from root *le- "to let go, slacken" (see let (v.)). The sense of "deceased" (as in the late Mrs. Smith) is from late 15c., from an adverbial sense of "recently." Of women's menstrual periods, attested colloquially from 1962. Related: Lateness. As an adverb, from O.E. late.lately O.E. lætlice "slow, sluggish;" see late (adj.) + -ly (2). Meaning "within recent times" is from late 15c., probably a new formation.later comparative of late. Meaning "farewell" is from 1954, U.S. slang, short for see you later.latest superlative of late. The latest "the news" attested from 1886.diseased late 15c., pp. adj. from M.E. verb disesen "to make uneasy; inflict pain" (mid-14c.), later "to have an illness or infection" (late 14c.); "to infect with a disease" (late 15c.), from disease (n.).soiree (n.) "an evening party," 1793, from Fr. soirée, from soir "evening," from O.Fr. soir, from L. sero (adv.) "late, at a late hour," from serum "late hour," neuter of serus "late," from PIE *se-ro-, from root *se- "long, late" (cf. Skt. sayam "in the evening," Lith. sietuva "deep place in a river," O.E. sið "after," Ger. seit "since," Goth. seiþus "late," M.Ir. sith, M.Breton hir "long"). clapper late 13c., agent noun from clap (v.). Meaning "tongue of a bell" is from late 14c.allowed (adj.) late 14c., "praised;" mid-15c., "assigned as a due share;" late 15c., "permitted," pp. adjective from allow.let (n.) "stoppage, obstruction" (obsolete unless in legal contracts), late 12c., from archaic verb letten "to hinder," from O.E. lettan "hinder, delay," from P.Gmc. *latjanan (cf. O.S. lettian "to hinder," O.N. letja "to hold back," O.H.G. lezzen "to stop, check," Goth. latjan "to hinder, make late," O.E. læt "sluggish, slow, late"); see late.healer (n.) late O.E., "one who heals," especially "savior, Jesus," agent noun from heal (v.). As "a curative medicine" from late 14c. parlous (adj.) late 14c., late Middle English contraction of perilous.quilter (n.) late 13c. (late 12c. as a surname); agent noun from quilt (v.).dyer (n.) late 14c. (late 13c. as a surname), agent noun from dye (v.).wap (n.) "a hit, a blow," late 14c., probably of imitative origin. The verb (late 14c.) originally meant "to throw quickly or with violence," and in slang c.1560-1730 it meant "to copulate" (usually used in reference to women).lodestar late 14c. (late 13c. as a surname), an old name for the pole star (cf. O.N. leiðarstjarna) as the star that "leads the way" in navigation; from lode (n.) + star (n.). Figurative use from late 14c. man-of-war late 14c., "a soldier," from man (n.) + war. Meaning "vessel equipped for warfare" is from late 15c. Man in the sense of "a ship" is attested from late 15c. in combinations (e.g. merchantman). The sea creature known as the Portuguese man-of-war (1707) is so called for its sail-like crest.AOL dominant online service of the late 1990s, acronym of America Online, company name from late 1989.waiter (n.) late 14c., "attendant, watchman," agent noun from wait (v.). Sense of "servant who waits at tables" is from late 15c., originally in reference to household servants; in reference to inns, eating houses, etc., it is attested from 1660s.parishioner (n.) late 15c., from parish. Outlasted its older doublet parochian (late 13c.), which was obsolete by 1700.sovereign late 13c., from O.Fr. soverain, from V.L. *superanus "chief, principal," from L. super "over" (see super-). Spelling influenced by folk-etymology association with reign. Milton spelled it sovran, as though from It. sovrano. Meaning "gold coin worth 22s 6d" first recorded late 15c.; value changed 1817 to 1 pound. As an adj., attested from early 14c.; of remedies or medicines, "potent in a high degree," from late 14c.tuck (v.) late 14c., "to pull or gather up," earlier "to pluck, stretch" (late 13c., implied in tucker), probably from M.L.G. or M.Du. tucken "pull up, draw up, tug" (cognate with O.E. tucian "mistreat, torment," and related to O.E. togian "to pull," Ger. zucken; see tow). Sense of "thrust into a snug place" is first recorded 1580s. Slang meaning "to consume, swallow" is recorded from 1784. The noun is first attested late 14c.
Who taught anyone to really be late ?
It has been taught to hurry up for this , hurry up for that .... OR else you'll be ' late ' .
NO ,
REALLY CLICK THAT purple LINK above AND REALLY check THE GROUPINGs OR SHALL WE SAY PAIRINGs O'er THE WORDs placed together over there in that arena . AND Hey, It's OK , Ety ((Y'all<- paula style) , it's clearly not your fault .
! E , So , So , EARLY ! yes ! sMh wit it .
VIDEO
<3 ya FREE!
now readers, what i always say ? ' i dont kno that man .' lmao ! Peace .... WAY !
No comments:
Post a Comment
.