10 Results found for "traverse oneself".

bekruisen

Catholicism) to make the sign of the cross, to becross oneself (transitive, nautical) to repeatedly traverse a patrol area, to sail on patrol throughout a certain...


purta

Latin portāre (“to carry, bring”), from Proto-Indo-European *per- (“go, traverse”). Compare Neapolitan purtà. IPA(key): [purˈta] a purta (third-person singular...


հատանեմ

strike (about a plague) to cross, to traverse, to pass հատանել զծով ― hatanel zcov ― to plough, cross or traverse the sea հատանել գծից զմիմեանս ― hatanel...


пребия

strike again (dialectal) to interrupt (someone's speech) (dialectal) to traverse, to transit, to pass over or through (with reference to sleep) to make...


nmnm

nmj (“to traverse”). (modern Egyptological) IPA(key): /nɛmnɛm/ Conventional anglicization: nemnem  4-lit. (intransitive) to bestir oneself, to move about...


pascor

deponent to feed oneself; to eat Synonyms: adedō, edō, vorō, prandeō, vēscor, cēnō, cōnsūmō to graze, feed, nourish, pasture, browse; traverse, roam the pastures...


began

with Old High German bigān. IPA(key): /beˈɡɑːn/ begān to bego, go over, traverse; get to, come by, fall into to go to, visit, care for, cultivate, affect...


walk

to full cloth to traverse by walking (or analogous gradual movement) colloquial: to leave, resign to push vehicle alongside oneself to behave to be stirring...


sir

verbal noun sireadh, past participle sirthe) (literary) travel through, traverse (literary) seek out, have recourse to (literary) seek, ask for An té a...


swim

once was blue, / And his foot swims in a capacious shoe. (transitive) To traverse (a specific body of water, or a specific distance) by swimming; or, to...