I think your referring to the Spanish Armada.
it means that the english plans didnt work and they need a new one
it means that the english plans didnt work and they need a new one
parish. do you mean German word? if that's what you meant, then no. it's English. parish. do you mean German word? if that's what you meant, then no. it's English. parish. do you mean German word? if that's what you meant, then no. it's English.
When the First Fleet arrived in Australia, it symbolised Great Britain's claim on the eastern half of the continent. Colonisation means settling an area in the name of a particular country (or group), and the First Fleet's arrival meant that Europeans were settling in Australia under the name of Great Britain.
The English word mummy is derived from medieval Latin mumia, a borrowing of the medieval Arabic word mūmiya(مومياء) and from a Persian word mūm (wax), which meant an embalmed corpse
it means that the english plans didnt work and they need a new one
it means that the english plans didnt work and they need a new one
I think your referring to the Spanish Armada.
it means that the english plans didnt work and they need a new one
Warships "missing and presumed lost" are normally meant to mean sunk. Under this catch all phrase, WW2 warships are accounted for.
It meant the same thing to him as it does to you and me. It also meant plays about English history, which were called "history plays" or just "histories".
The word woman comes from the Old English word wifmanwhich meant "female human" or "one" or "someone").Over the years this has changed to woman.
There is no word in English called "gace".If you meant the verb gave then the past participle is given.
The word is based on the Old English word pentis which meant 'appendage'.
"Bird" is from the old English word 'brid' which originally meant a chick or young bird.
I believe you meant Early Russian emperors are called? Tsar occasionally spelled Czar or Tzar in English, Zar in German.
English: habitational name from a place in Buckinghamshire, so called from the Old English river name S?ge, which probably meant 'trickling', 'slow-moving', + Old English broc'stream'.