mirùs, -ì adj. (4) mirtingas: Tik vienas kūnas tėra mirus Blv. Abudu tvirtai tiki nemiria žmogaus dvasios galia Pč.
- mire (n.)
- c.1300, from a Scandinavian source such as Old Norse myrr "bog, swamp," from Proto-Germanic *miuzja- (source of Old English mos "bog, marsh"), from PIE *meus- "damp" (see moss).
- mire (v.)
- c.1400, in figurative sense of "to involve in difficulties," from mire (n.). Literal sense is from 1550s. Related: Mired; miring.
мир
From Proto-Slavic *mirъ (“peace; world”).
World
From Middle English world, weoreld, from Old English world, worold, woruld, weorold (“world, age, men, humanity, life, way of life, long period of time, cycle, eternity”), from Proto-Germanic *weraldiz (“lifetime, worldly existence, mankind, age of man, world”), equivalent to wer (“man”) + eld (“age”). Cognate with Scots warld (“world”), Saterland Frisian Waareld (“world”), West Frisian wrâld (“world”), Dutch wereld (“world”), Low German Werld (“world”), German Welt (“world”), Swedish värld (“world”), Icelandic veröld (“the world”).
Greičiau jau, paprasčiausiai, “valda”.
Pelkė gi kadaise labai svarbi buvo.
Vandenai ... marios ... palios ... pelkės ...
Seni laikai...
Pelkių valdovas.
World ir mirъ.
Vieniem valda, kitiem pelkė.
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