Kai tėra variantai, tegali variuot arba nevariuot.
Mokykloj mokino, kad reikia rašyti „piauti“; dabar jau rašom „pjauti“, bet tebe „variantas“.
Ir Iliada, ne Ilijada.
Ponas Bynas sapnavo, kad tapo olimpiniu čempionu.
Olimpo kalnas, aukščiausias Graikijos kalnas.
In Greek mythology Olympus was regarded as the "home" of the Twelve Olympian gods of the ancient Greek world.
"Our Twelve Gods are also called ΟΛΥΜΠΙΟΙ ('Olympioi', The Olympians)
Dualizmas, suprantamas kaip neigimas...
Heraklio žygis Trojon su aštuoniolika laivų.
The concept of the "Twelve Gods" is older than any extant Greek or Roman sources, and is likely of Anatolian origin.
Tik Mėnulio betrūksta virš Olimpo.
Olympus
high mountain in Thessaly, abode of the gods, from Gk. Olympos, of unknown origin.
Olympic
c.1600, "of or in reference to Olympos, also Olympia (khora)," town or district in Elis in ancient Greece, where athletic contests in honor of Olympian Zeus were held 776 B.C.E. and every four years thereafter, from Gk. Olympikos, from Olympos, of unknown origin. The modern Olympic Games are a revival, begun in 1896. Not the same place as Mount Olympus, abode of the gods, which was in Thessaly.
Olympus.
Olimpo kalnas (gr. Όρος Όλυμπος, Óros Ólimbos).
Lympia.
Lymbia.
The name derives from the original name of the settlement Olympia.
limb (n.1)
"part or member," O.E. lim "limb, joint, main branch of a tree," from P.Gmc. *limu- (cf. O.N. limr "limb," lim "small branch of a tree"), a variant of *liþu- (cf. O.E. liþ, O.Fris. lith, O.N. liðr, Goth. liþus "a limb;" and with prefix ga-, source of Ger. Glied "limb, member"), from PIE root *lei- "to bend, be movable, be nimble." The parasitic -b began to appear late 1500s for no etymological reason (perhaps by influence of limb (n.2)). In Old and Middle English, and until lately in dialects, it could mean "any visible body part."
The lymmes of generacion were shewed manyfestly. [Caxton, "The subtyl historyes and fables of Esope, Auyan, Alfonce, and Poge," 1484]
Hence, limb-lifter "fornicator" (1570s). To go out on a limb in figurative sense "enter a risky situation" is from 1897. Life and limb in reference to the body inclusively is from c.1200.
limbus
Latin, lit. "edge, border" (see limb (2)). In M.L. "region on the border of Hell," and thus sometimes used in English for limbo (1).
limbo (n.1)
"region supposed to exist on the border of Hell" reserved for pre-Christian saints (Limbus patrum) and unbaptized infants (Limbus infantum);" c.1300, from L. limbo, ablative of limbus "edge, border" (see limb (2)). It emerged from Latin in the ablative form from frequent use in phrases such as in limbo (patrum), etc. Figurative sense of "condition of neglect or oblivion" is from 1640s.
limbo (2)
dance in which the dancer bends backward and passes under a bar, 1956, of W.Indian origin, probably an alteration of limber.lect or oblivion" is from 1640s.
limber (adj.)
"pliant, flexible," 1560s, of uncertain origin, possibly from limb (n.1) on notion of supple boughs of a tree [Barnhart], or from limp "flaccid" [Skeat], or somehow from M.E. lymer "shaft of a cart" (see limber (n.)), but the late appearance of the -b- in that word argues against it. Related: Limberness. Dryden used limber-ham (see ham (n.1) in the "joint" sense) as a name for a character "perswaded by what is last said to him, and changing next word."
Na va.
Prasidėjo.
limber (n.)
"detachable forepart of a gun carriage," 1620s, from M.E. lymer (early 15c.), earlier lymon (c.1400), probably from O.Fr. limon "shaft," a word perhaps of Celtic origin, or possibly from Germanic and related to limb (n.1). Hence, limber (v.) "to attach a limber to a gun" (1843). Cf. related Sp. limon "shaft," leman "helmsman."
Most climbs to Mount Olympus start from the town of Litochoro, which took the name City of Gods because of its location on the roots of the mountain.
Λιτόχωρο.
lìmbas sm. (1) TrpŽ laipsniais padalytas skritulys, kuriuo kampų matavimo instrumentais apskaičiuojamas kampų dydis.
limbù interj. negreitam ėjimui nusakyti: Mano anūkutis tik limbù limbù per pirkelę an visų keturių Nč.
Į Olimpiečius taikos, ne kitaip...
lim̃bintis, -inasi, -inosi lipti, rioglintis: Katinas, bimbinas per langelį limbinas (žaidinant vaikus) Vlk.
Dievų Miestas...
Olimpiada.
The Virgilian commentator Servius wrote that the Teuti, or Pelops, the king of the Pisaeans, arrived on the Tyrrhenian coast after the Trojan War and founded the Italian (and more famous) Pisa thirteen centuries before the start of the common era.
The origin of the name, Pisa, is a mystery.
Olimpiečiai lipa Olimpan.
Tiki, kad įlips.
Nori būti viršūnėje.
Galingi, kaip graikų Olimpiečiai.
Galynėjasi.
Dėl pergalės.
Galūnėmis.
Ar, vis tik, vidumi?
Olimpo kalnas, aukščiausias Graikijos kalnas.
In Greek mythology Olympus was regarded as the "home" of the Twelve Olympian gods of the ancient Greek world.
"Our Twelve Gods are also called ΟΛΥΜΠΙΟΙ ('Olympioi', The Olympians)
Dualizmas, suprantamas kaip neigimas...
Heraklio žygis Trojon su aštuoniolika laivų.
The concept of the "Twelve Gods" is older than any extant Greek or Roman sources, and is likely of Anatolian origin.
Tik Mėnulio betrūksta virš Olimpo.
Olympus
high mountain in Thessaly, abode of the gods, from Gk. Olympos, of unknown origin.
Olympic
c.1600, "of or in reference to Olympos, also Olympia (khora)," town or district in Elis in ancient Greece, where athletic contests in honor of Olympian Zeus were held 776 B.C.E. and every four years thereafter, from Gk. Olympikos, from Olympos, of unknown origin. The modern Olympic Games are a revival, begun in 1896. Not the same place as Mount Olympus, abode of the gods, which was in Thessaly.
Olympus.
Olimpo kalnas (gr. Όρος Όλυμπος, Óros Ólimbos).
Lympia.
Lymbia.
The name derives from the original name of the settlement Olympia.
limb (n.1)
"part or member," O.E. lim "limb, joint, main branch of a tree," from P.Gmc. *limu- (cf. O.N. limr "limb," lim "small branch of a tree"), a variant of *liþu- (cf. O.E. liþ, O.Fris. lith, O.N. liðr, Goth. liþus "a limb;" and with prefix ga-, source of Ger. Glied "limb, member"), from PIE root *lei- "to bend, be movable, be nimble." The parasitic -b began to appear late 1500s for no etymological reason (perhaps by influence of limb (n.2)). In Old and Middle English, and until lately in dialects, it could mean "any visible body part."
The lymmes of generacion were shewed manyfestly. [Caxton, "The subtyl historyes and fables of Esope, Auyan, Alfonce, and Poge," 1484]
Hence, limb-lifter "fornicator" (1570s). To go out on a limb in figurative sense "enter a risky situation" is from 1897. Life and limb in reference to the body inclusively is from c.1200.
limbus
Latin, lit. "edge, border" (see limb (2)). In M.L. "region on the border of Hell," and thus sometimes used in English for limbo (1).
limbo (n.1)
"region supposed to exist on the border of Hell" reserved for pre-Christian saints (Limbus patrum) and unbaptized infants (Limbus infantum);" c.1300, from L. limbo, ablative of limbus "edge, border" (see limb (2)). It emerged from Latin in the ablative form from frequent use in phrases such as in limbo (patrum), etc. Figurative sense of "condition of neglect or oblivion" is from 1640s.
limbo (2)
dance in which the dancer bends backward and passes under a bar, 1956, of W.Indian origin, probably an alteration of limber.lect or oblivion" is from 1640s.
limber (adj.)
"pliant, flexible," 1560s, of uncertain origin, possibly from limb (n.1) on notion of supple boughs of a tree [Barnhart], or from limp "flaccid" [Skeat], or somehow from M.E. lymer "shaft of a cart" (see limber (n.)), but the late appearance of the -b- in that word argues against it. Related: Limberness. Dryden used limber-ham (see ham (n.1) in the "joint" sense) as a name for a character "perswaded by what is last said to him, and changing next word."
Na va.
Prasidėjo.
limber (n.)
"detachable forepart of a gun carriage," 1620s, from M.E. lymer (early 15c.), earlier lymon (c.1400), probably from O.Fr. limon "shaft," a word perhaps of Celtic origin, or possibly from Germanic and related to limb (n.1). Hence, limber (v.) "to attach a limber to a gun" (1843). Cf. related Sp. limon "shaft," leman "helmsman."
Most climbs to Mount Olympus start from the town of Litochoro, which took the name City of Gods because of its location on the roots of the mountain.
Λιτόχωρο.
lìmbas sm. (1) TrpŽ laipsniais padalytas skritulys, kuriuo kampų matavimo instrumentais apskaičiuojamas kampų dydis.
limbù interj. negreitam ėjimui nusakyti: Mano anūkutis tik limbù limbù per pirkelę an visų keturių Nč.
Į Olimpiečius taikos, ne kitaip...
lim̃bintis, -inasi, -inosi lipti, rioglintis: Katinas, bimbinas per langelį limbinas (žaidinant vaikus) Vlk.
Dievų Miestas...
Olimpiada.
The Virgilian commentator Servius wrote that the Teuti, or Pelops, the king of the Pisaeans, arrived on the Tyrrhenian coast after the Trojan War and founded the Italian (and more famous) Pisa thirteen centuries before the start of the common era.
The origin of the name, Pisa, is a mystery.
Olimpiečiai lipa Olimpan.
Tiki, kad įlips.
Nori būti viršūnėje.
Galingi, kaip graikų Olimpiečiai.
Galynėjasi.
Dėl pergalės.
Galūnėmis.
Ar, vis tik, vidumi?