Please leave me a message at my Wikipedia talk page, since I don't check this one often....
ask me on my Talk page. Again, welcome! I have reverted your edits to <span class="searchmatch">flexing</span>, as the sense of the word (and its accompanying etymology) appears to be...
you're looking to the german Wiktionary and writeing "<span class="searchmatch">Flexion</span>:reputabel", "<span class="searchmatch">Flexion</span>:übel", "<span class="searchmatch">Flexion</span>:..." There existed also some other German adjectives...
differently. In my E, the four fingers are more extended at the base and more <span class="searchmatch">flexed</span> at the medial and distal joints, resulting in no contact between the thumb...
15:01, 29 April 2014 (UTC) Hello, I would like to use one of your images (<span class="searchmatch">flexed</span>/pronated arm). How would you prefer to be cited? Best, Jcosru (talk) 17:37...
spoken and does it sound good, is it understandable? de:ächzen and de:<span class="searchmatch">Flexion</span>:ächzen only have ächze and no ächz. I guess, they think it's not speakable...
world. Maybe they do clutter the translations and maybe it is better to add <span class="searchmatch">flexed</span> forms to pages dedicated to those words. It takes more effort to instantly...
comes up with an objection or a better proposal. English entries do not <span class="searchmatch">flex</span> ot tweak the constituent terms before compounding them: "headache" = "head"...
world. Maybe they do clutter the translations and maybe it is better to add <span class="searchmatch">flexed</span> forms to pages dedicated to those words. It takes more effort to instantly...
not a specialist in <span class="searchmatch">FLEx</span>, so the fact I couldn't figure out how to do it doesn't necessarily mean it can't be done; but the <span class="searchmatch">FLEx</span>-oriented people I talked...