when he was in the tree he was looking around and fell in the trenches, he was scared and moved too quickly. Then a horse found him when he was limping out of the trenches and the horse told him that a leprechaun was knocked on his door and told him that light was cold for him and so that I told him he had to go up upstairs and ask his mom for a sweater. And so she handed him a pot a spagett but he couldn't eat it because he was a cold blooded animal. It then reminded him of a movie about a leprechaun and it was real bad. Then the horse couldn't put up with his trash so he ate the leprechaun. So then the horse closed the door and saw tornado running towards them and told the man to get on his back so that they could run back to the house they were just at like 2 seconds and go in the kitchen because that is the safest place for them to be at because tornadoes are scared of spatulas. But that was a bad idea because it wasnt a tornado, it was a hurricane so it actually likes spatulas. And so the hurricane got to the house but instead of hurting the horse and the man, it gently picked them up and carried them to the hospital for their annual checkup. The man and horse were a-okay (thumbs up) and then the horse and man went home together and lived happily ever after. (Tada)
maht-EEM (מתאים)
'Matteo' is an Italian equivalent of 'Matthew'. It's pronounced 'maht-TEH-oh'. Many Italian names have feminine and masculine forms. The feminine equivalent, 'Mattea', is pronounced 'maht-TEH-ah'.
The French word for tomato is "tomate" pronounced "toe-MAHT"
Maat, Maa, Maet, Maht, Mat, Maut.
rah-MAHT If you're going for the name of a place, as in "Golan Heights", be aware that in Hebrew, the phrase gets constructed backwards ... it would come out "Heights Golan" ... so the word "Ramat" would be the first word in the name of the place ... "rah-MAHT ha-go-LAHN".Height = rah-MAH (רמה)heights = rah-MOHT (רמות)But if you're thinking of "Heights" as in the names of places in Israel, it's "rah-MAHT". But the names aren't constructed the way you might think.The Golan Heights is "rah-MAHT hah-go-LAHN", or "Heights [of] the Golan".The northern suburb of Tel Aviv, wherre the diamond industry is centered and where my daughter lives is "rah-MAHT GAHN", which roughly translates as "Garden Heights".
Mother in Russian is "мать". (Maht') Mom/Mum would be "мама". (Mah-muh)
Selamat datang is pronounced "suh-lah-maht dah-tahng" in Indonesian.
yes gym is better then maht because in gym you run and in math u sit in a desk
i think that it is a base because in my maht book it says that... In a power, the number used as a factor But i am not 100% sure i am about 75% sure
The cast of The Critics - 2011 includes: Mary Beth McMahon Juliet Schaefer Mark Vanesse Maht Wells
Matt is a cognate nickname in Italian and English.Specifically, the name is a masculine proper noun. It is a nickname for Matteo in Italian and "Matthew" in Engilsh. The pronunciation is "maht."
The Russian word for mother is мать, which is simply pronounced "maht" (like "mat" with a short o sound). I hope this has helped. Feel free to improve this answer! :)