10 Results found for "crown oneself".

autocoronarse

singular preterite me autocoroné, past participle autocoronado) to crown oneself     Conjugation of autocoronarse (See Appendix:Spanish verbs) 1Mostly...


נזר

“he cursed”). נֵזֶר • (nézer) m [pattern: קֵטֶל] crown, wreath נִזַּר • (nizár) (nif'al construction) to deprive oneself (of something) נָזִיר (nazír)...


թագ

(anjin) ― to crown oneself, to put on the crown, to bind on the diadem թագ դնել (այլում) ― tʻag dnel (aylum) ― to crown, to place a crown on the head of...


sibi

to herself, to itself, to themselves sibi placērī ― to be pleased with oneself c. 52 BCE, Julius Caesar, Commentarii de Bello Gallico 1.44: Amicitiam...


uglily

superlative most uglily) In an ugly manner. 1921, James Branch Cabell, “The Crown of Wisdom”, in Figures of Earth: A Comedy of Appearances, Robert M[edill]...


обличам

to put on to clothe, to dress, to don (an item of clothing, garment) to crown (a tooth) (ditransitive) to provide with clothing to cover, to upholster...


ἐρέφω

Tyana 1.25 to crown 522 BCE – 443 BCE, Pindar, Olympian Ode 13.32 406 BCE, Sophocles, Oedipus at Colonus 473 (middle voice) to crown oneself 300 BCE – 250...


abdicate

] (transitive, reflexive, obsolete) To formally separate oneself from or to divest oneself of. [mid 16th – late 17th c.] (transitive, obsolete) To depose...


одягати

and crowns. Moreover, надяга́ти (nadjaháty) should be used to describe the process of pulling clothes on someone or something and not on oneself. Conjugation...


break free

simple past broke free, past participle broken free) To liberate oneself; to free oneself; to become free (from or of something or someone). During the storm...