Speekerz8
66
Wiki User
∙ 14y agoThe Latin word 'palus" is one of those tricky ones. If it is in the masculine, it is a stake, specifically the heavy stake that the army recruits used to practice their sword and javelin works. However if it is feminine, it means a swamp, marsh or bog.The Latin word 'palus" is one of those tricky ones. If it is in the masculine, it is a stake, specifically the heavy stake that the army recruits used to practice their sword and javelin works. However if it is feminine, it means a swamp, marsh or bog.The Latin word 'palus" is one of those tricky ones. If it is in the masculine, it is a stake, specifically the heavy stake that the army recruits used to practice their sword and javelin works. However if it is feminine, it means a swamp, marsh or bog.The Latin word 'palus" is one of those tricky ones. If it is in the masculine, it is a stake, specifically the heavy stake that the army recruits used to practice their sword and javelin works. However if it is feminine, it means a swamp, marsh or bog.The Latin word 'palus" is one of those tricky ones. If it is in the masculine, it is a stake, specifically the heavy stake that the army recruits used to practice their sword and javelin works. However if it is feminine, it means a swamp, marsh or bog.The Latin word 'palus" is one of those tricky ones. If it is in the masculine, it is a stake, specifically the heavy stake that the army recruits used to practice their sword and javelin works. However if it is feminine, it means a swamp, marsh or bog.The Latin word 'palus" is one of those tricky ones. If it is in the masculine, it is a stake, specifically the heavy stake that the army recruits used to practice their sword and javelin works. However if it is feminine, it means a swamp, marsh or bog.The Latin word 'palus" is one of those tricky ones. If it is in the masculine, it is a stake, specifically the heavy stake that the army recruits used to practice their sword and javelin works. However if it is feminine, it means a swamp, marsh or bog.The Latin word 'palus" is one of those tricky ones. If it is in the masculine, it is a stake, specifically the heavy stake that the army recruits used to practice their sword and javelin works. However if it is feminine, it means a swamp, marsh or bog.
7
Tyndale
BNP Paribas Arbitrage Fund
This is because he had been translate the Bible into English, and he was stake and burnt in the city of Brussels. In addition, he died as a martyr.
66
he means that he has a chain attached to him, which is attached to a stake presumably in the ground.
The same as 'grounding' , putting a wire or metal stake into the ground so something attached to it has the same electrical potential
A tent-peg. A spike. A stake.
Put a stake in the ground on opposite side, tether with old inner tube til it straightens.
use a piece of 2inch square timber about 12 inches long if for raised beds or as long as you need it to be for anything else then saw an angle on all 4 sides of one end and you have a stake you can drive into the ground ( or a vampire if that's your wish)
stake
A stake
A stake
A homophone for "meat" and "stick in ground" could be "meet" and "stake in ground."
To be "Burnt at the Stake" is to be tied to a piece of wood pounded in the ground (A "Stake") and to be lit on fire. Burning at the stake is is when someone is tied to a wooden stake and the stake is set on fire. You burn to death.
When I attend the yearly Renaissance Faire, I love to partake in a nice "Steak-On-A-Stake". I would not like to be burned at the stake for that answer. Be careful that you don't trip over that stake in the ground.