Rao, an Indian princely title cognate with raja
The word 'Viking' is an Old Norse word for a week-long sea voyage. It is cognate with the English word 'week'.
I know the comma rules 1,3,5 that MY teacher taught us. They are: 1: items in a series. 3: while, -ing word………. 5: separate sentence interruptors. I am terribly sorry that I can't help you with #'s 2,4,&6. ;P;P;P;P;P;P;P;P;P;P;P;P;P;P;P;P;P;P;P;P;P;P;P;P;P;P;P;P;P;P;P;P;P;P;P;P;P;P:P;P:P;P;P
hello.......................................................................................................... :) :) :) :) :) :) : ) : ) ) : )P ) P)P)P)P)P)P)P)P)P)P)P)P)P) >>
P=B×RB=P÷RR=P÷B
A linking verb that can be used with a cognate is called a Transitive or Intransitive verb. The cognate is the verbs object.
"January" translates to "enero"
Cognate languages have many of the same roots for words. Ex: impaciente
The cognate for English "old" in Spanish is "viejo" and in French is "vieux".
Yes. In Spanish, "guitar" translates to "guitarra."
The word "precipice" has a cognate in Latin, which is "praeceps," meaning "headlong" or "steep."
The Dutch word for surgery is the cognate chirurgie - or operatie which is a cognate of operation.
The English word "mother" and the Spanish word "madre" are cognates because they share a common Latin root.
No cognate comes to mind, but the closest translation is fortaleza.
Yes, "fiesta" is a cognate. It comes from the Spanish language and is directly related to the English word "feast", both of which refer to a large and festive gathering or party.
not related
I don´t think it is really a "cognate". The closest I can think of would be "superb".