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Originally posted by pepsi78
Anus means what you state but it also means the season cycle, the year, it is the main description.
anus
N M
|year (astronomical/civil); age| time of life; year's produce
The rest are derivatives of it.
But let's take another Latin dictionary.
For the main description of the dictionary for the word anus:
www.latin-dictionary.org...
N M
|year (astronomical/civil); age| time of life; year's produce
As you can see it's the main description. Also Identical, thank you
Anus comes in turn from IE: AN-O ANO AN.
Atnos is composed of two elements AT and NOS, AN=AT in IE AN also=ON TO. AN-O = cycle season, it is clear where the name comes from and that atnos is a mix of these since they all bare close resemblence.
That is the same damn translator from the aggregator. Look at the name of it (JM Latin Dictioanry) and stop trying to be dishonest by passing it off as another.
Your opinion is incapable of rewriting historical evidence that proves you wrong. The Proto Indo European
lexicons are all peer reviewed,
mysite.verizon.net...
An
On, at
www.utexas.edu...
Latin: an- pfx on, to
Old English: an/on adv/prep/pfx (up)on, in, at, onto
Etymology
From Middle English at (“at, toward”), from Old English æt (“at, near, by, toward”), from Proto-Germanic *ata, *at (“at, near, to”), from Proto-Indo-European *ad (“to, near, by”). Cognate with North Frisian et, it (“at”), Faroese at (“at, to, toward”), Norwegian åt (“to”), Swedish åt (“for, toward”), Icelandic að (“to, towards”).
Originally posted by pepsi78
It's another site, it's the same translation because it's what it means.
site number one:
www.babylon.com...
site number two:
www.latin-dictionary.org...
It's the same description because it's what it means as in the main description.
I don't think it does, you see your AT-NOS is made out of two words, into one word as it's not a whole.
AT comes from AN.
I am not making it up, AN=AT in proto IE.
mysite.verizon.net...
An
On, at
Atnos is made of two components, AT and NOS.
AT=TO.
AN=TO
www.utexas.edu...
Latin: an- pfx on, to
It's where the word comes from, it was anus then annus, atnos mixed with an, an-o.
Same for English.
Old English: an/on adv/prep/pfx (up)on, in, at, onto
You are outright lying. It is the same site, both of them are the Babylon website. It is in the header on both webpages.
No one cares what you think. You may think about reinventing language but it will not make it so. The Proto Indo European lexicon is peer reviewed. You need to refure it with more then your opinion.
Wrong. Even your own source indicates they are two different words as they have 'ano' (ring) listed seperately. Stop making things up.
An
On, at
An
This, that
An-, ano-, no-
Up to, toward (prefix)
Firstly, your English is just as horrific as your Latin. Secondly, WE ARE NOT DEBATING THE ENGLISH TRANSLATION OF WORDS, ONLY LATIN. Pay attention.
Latin: an- pfx on, to
Old English: an/on adv/prep/pfx (up)on, in, at, onto
Originally posted by pepsi78
It's two different sites, they may be connected, I have no Idea...
It's made out of two words, it's not what I think, it's fact, made out AT that is AN and Nos. The word is AT-NOS from two words.
Not really ano is connected to an, it is also spelled AN-O with a separation.
Ano, sano
Ring
What it means in latin
Latin: an- pfx on, to
What it means in Enlgish, same thing as in Latin.
Old English: an/on adv/prep/pfx (up)on, in, at, onto
You do have an idea. They are the SAME site. Stop lying and trying to present fasle evidence. It is dispicable and shameful.
Who cares? It still means two different things.
Stop lying. Anyone can check your sources:
No one cares if 'an-' equals 'to'. I see nothing there about 'an-' equalling 'time' which was your originally flawed arguement. When will you post some evidence?
An-, ano-, no-
Up to, toward (prefix)
Originally posted by pepsi78
It's a Latin dictionary, it's not false evidence, it's the description of the word, the main one, as the second dictionary shows this, that it is the main description.
You are deluded.
In your imagination it does.
I am not lying, ano is bounded to an, can't you see they are grouped ?
it what AT means, it's where it comes from, from AN. It's not a flawed argument.
Remember:
An-, ano-, no-
Up to, toward (prefix)
It is the SAME dictionary. The website header proves this. Stop lying and presenting false evidence of it being two different sites.
Better than dishonest.
N M
|year (astronomical/civil); age| time of life; year's produce
They are 'grouped' because they start with the letter 'A'. Also, one is a PREFIX, the other is a word. Notice the hypen '-'? That means 'prefix', not word.
Yup. Nothing about 'time' there. You keep posting that, no one is convinced (not even you I bet).
Originally posted by pepsi78
It is a Latin dictionary, the description of the word states clear what the word implies.
I don't see how I am dishonest...
...if what you state is true then even better, it shows that it is the main derscription from the same dictionary.
No they are grouped because they share the same notion, they are grouped and apart also.
It's what AT means to, towards.
It is still the same one on the same site. Not two different ones.
What are you, two? Because you are trying to pass off the same source as MULTIPLE sources. It is called lying.
It is better, because it shows everyone how dishonest you are and that it does not matter how low you will go to try and make your point.
A PREFIX and a WORD are two different things. Learn the difference.
I still see nothing about 'time' in the defintion. Maybe you can relink the same site a few more times to try and buttress your point.
Originally posted by pepsi78
first , It's a different adress, as in a http address...
It's the second result that has a search function from latin dictionary, from google.
What matters is that it's a Latin Dictionary.
I don't see how I'm dishonest...
They are grouped because they share the same meaning
When you see this line at the end "-" it means you can add on top of the word, as in an EXTENSION.
it's what an extension is a prefix, pre-fix meaning you can add on the word.
On to, towards means just that, the cycle...
Originally posted by IKTOMI
Its like wrestling a pig in mud. You get sh*t all over you and the pig likes it!
Originally posted by IKTOMI
Thats Hott!
Unity Lodge #96 Mayslanding , NJ
The http does not need to be indentical for it to be the same site. It is obvious by now that it is as the text is parsed in the same manner (including the missing 'see also' at the bottom).
What matters is you tried to pass the same source off as two sources and still will not admit to the dishonesty. Keep it up. Everyone sees through you.
By lying. See above.
When words share the same meaning they are called synonyms, not prefixes, learn some syntax and grammar.
wordinfo.info...:8
ana-, an-, ano-, am- +
(Greek: up, upward; back, backward, against; again, anew; used as a prefix)
Now that I have educated you on this, tell me; why does the word 'ano' not have a hypen?
Because it is not a prefix and means 'ring'. Now tell me this; why does the word 'an-' have a hyphen? Because it is a prefix and means 'or'. Sorry, learn some Latin. Adverbs and verbs/nouns are two different things. I think even someone with an honesty problem would recoginze this as obviously true.
The hyphen ( ‐ ) is a punctuation mark used to join words and to separate syllables
www.informatics.sussex.ac.uk...
The hyphen (-) is the small bar found on every keyboard. It has several related uses; in every case, it is used to show that what it is attached to does not make up a complete word by itself. The hyphen must never be used with white spaces at both ends, though in some uses it may have a white space at one end.
So, it means 'towards', 'to', 'cycle, 'ring', 'year', 'rectum', etc. According to you the Romans used the word 'an' for everything except the kitchen sink (until you decide to tell us it meant that too). Do you see how foolish you have gotten?
An-, ano-, no-
Up to, toward (prefix)
Originally posted by pepsi78
It is not the same site, it has a different design, layout not that it matters.
If it's the same source as you state, even better, it shows that the main description is that what I have stated.
I did not lie, that is your invention, maybe the sites are branded by the same company, but they are different sites, with different addresses. As I stated if it's the same branding, good, it shows that it is the main definition
It's a prefix word. The words are grouped because they share the same meaning, ano is a descendant of AN
This can be viewd in greek also.
wordinfo.info...:8
ana-, an-, ano-, am- +
(Greek: up, upward; back, backward, against; again, anew; used as a prefix)
Where the romans started out from from the greeks, with the cycle and the calendar.
It may mean ring but it also means season, cycle, on to toward, mainly because it shares it's meanings with AN.
The word AN has a hypen because it may be joined with other words like AN-O.
Ano does have a hypen.
I provided a Latin dictionary with the description, it does mean season, cycle.
An-, ano-, no-
Up to, toward (prefix)
Originally posted by pepsi78
As I stated before, it's getting to be a pointless debate, with you invalidating dictionaries and such.
I don't want to spam the forum repeating my self...
You have your opinion and I have mine.