She spoke with such serious and tender grace that Gordon seemed to be touched in its depths. Middle English tender, delicate, borrowed from the anglo-French tender, going back to the Latin tener “soft, tender (of people or parts of the body), immature, slightly docile, sensitive”, probably by metathesis of *terenos or *terunos, which goes back to the Indo-European, hence the Greek also tãrÄn© “sweet, delicate”, Sanskrit taruá¹a- “young, tender, fresh”, avestan tauruna- “young”, (as a name) “boy” Anglo-French Tend to offer, proposes to assume, literally stretching, stretching, enduring, tending from Old French, from the Latin tendree Middle English, probably partly derived from tender stretcher entry 3, partly borrowed from its source, Anglo-French tenderive tèndêr (tenderku possessive in the first person, tendermu possessive in the second person, tendernya possessive in the third person) But it retained the same tone, and his delicate bow gave his sense of relief only greater sweetness. Tender Middle English “to become tender, to care, to worry about”, derived from tender, tender tender starter 1 From the Middle English tender, tendere, from the Anglo-Norman tender, old French tender, from the Latin tenerum, tenerum (“sweet, delicate”). From the Middle English tender, tendur, tendir, tender, from the adjective (see above). According to the Swiss press, the youngest cats in the litter box are the most tender and, as such, the favorite cat cuts. That is why she needs affectionate care that is more tender than the strongest. From the Dutch tender: from the English tender, from the Middle English tendren, from the Old French tendre (“to extend”), from the Latin tendere, the current active infinitive of tendō. The authorities have launched a call for tenders for the project. Because Lettice – the tender wife of his first acquaintance – had obviously experienced a moment of reaction.
These forms are generated automatically and don`t really need to be used. The use of pronouns varies by region. From the Latin tendere, the current active infinitive of tendō, from the proto-cursive *tendō, from the proto-Indo-European *ten- (“to stretch, draw”). Not surprisingly, a construction company in its region has already submitted a tender for the construction of the project. Tender (comparison bidder, superlative Tenderest) For her abstract artwork, she became an international sensation at the age of two – even before she started kindergarten. Middle English tendur “granting a license”, borrowed from the Anglo-French tender “to offer, to offer to satisfy a debt”, name of the infinitive to tend “to extend, endure, offer (a trial, a demand, money), grant”, return to the Latin tender “to reach outwards, to stretch, to extend, directly (the price), goal (to an end)”, return to the Indo-European *ten- “to stretch, to extend” + *-d- (or *-dh-), extension suffix of uncertain origin – more to Tenant entry 1 Note: Macrobius (early 5th century) cites favorinus (c. 80-160 AD) in his Saturnalia as a statement that Terenus meant mollis (“sweet”) in Sabine; This form would support the hypothesis of metathesis in the Latin Tener. Ernout and Meillet (Dictionnaire Ãtymologiquedelalalangue©latine, 4. Auflage, Paris, 1979) reject this etymology without comment and refer instead to a possible link with the ten of tenäre, tendere, tenuis (see tenant entry 1, tender entry 3, thin entry 1). Note: An insurance company may be required to offer the limits of a policy to an aggrieved party if a higher amount is likely to be awarded at the court hearing.
probably the name derived from tender entry 1 or tender entry 6 in the sense of “taking care of oneself” I cannot reconcile the idea of a tender heavenly father with the well-known horrors of war, slavery, plague and madness. Tender (third person singular simple current, current spelling of participle, past simple and past participle announced) Reduce the heat to medium-low, cover and simmer until the potatoes are soft, about 25 minutes. They then submitted their own bid for the project. 1Strestement outdated, today mainly used in legal language.2The Argentine and Uruguayan voseo prefers the form tú for the current subjunctive. Always economical, often powerful, Ryan Adams alternates hard pop songs with tender and ruthless ballads. From the Dutch offer, from the English offer, tends + -er Note: See note under entry 1 of the tenant. The original past section of tendere is tentus, which is an Indo-European verbal adjective *tnÌ¥-tos, from which the Greek tatã³s is also derived, which seems to be derived directly from the base *ten- and not from *tend-. The tentus form has been largely replaced by tensus, probably by *tend-tos, a regular derivative of the new tend-formation. The coffee tree slept in his chair; the doorman was gone; Only the guard stood awake at his post. Toubia said the company will even be able to tailor the steak to a specific country or palate, for example, to make it more or less tender depending on the consumer`s taste.
If Team Allen announces by March 17, his one-year salary would be $850,000. tender (first person singular present-indicative-tendo, past-spartan-tendido) It may not be a sharp and dazzling tully, but sometimes a tender and unpretentious Kate makes better company anyway. From the tender Middle English, from the tender old French (“stretching”). Note: The obvious use of the Anglo-French nominalized infinitive as an inflected verb in Middle English is complemented by rendering entry 2. See tends to be entry 1, a more regular borrowing of the stem of the same verb, in a different sense. .