Queue.
Queu
Que
Qu
Q
Queue
queue
there are 4 pairs of letters in the word instruction i.e NT ,ST ,NO ,CI
The English Renaissance saw the break away from churchs and freedom of the arts.
They wanted to get away from the British. They did not like their rule, they did not want to speak english, and they did not agree with Great Britian's doing away with enslavement.
puitans
H,i,n,o,x and z. -------------- H, I and N only work in upper case (capitals),whereas o, x, z work in either upper or lower case. There is also a seventh letter: S (or s). It also depends on the font being used, and its not just English this applies to but any language using the Latin alphabet.
Queue Can you also add "aitch" ?
queue
Festa di partenza is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "going away party." The feminine singular prepositional phrase translates literally as "party of departure" in English. The pronunciation will be "FEH-sta dee par-TEN-tsa" in Italian.
Queue or Q (as in waiting in a queue or the letter Q)
QUEUE, remove "UEUE", say Q
Va-t'en! is a French equivalent of "You get out of here!" The present imperative, reflexive pronoun, and partitive also may be translated into English as "Be off!" or Go away!" The pronunciation will be "va-taw" in French.
"I have to go away" is an English equivalent of the Italian phrase Devo andare via. The present indicative in the first person singular, present infinitive, and adverb also translate into English as "I'm obliged (supposed) to go away," "I must (need to, ought to) go away," and "I should be going away" according to context. The pronunciation will be "DEY-vo an-DA-rey VEE-a" in Italian.
"Far away from your lamp" is an English equivalent of the Italian phrase lungi dal vostro lume. The masculine singular phrase also translates as "Far from your enlightenment" or "Far from your light" according to English contexts. The pronunciation will be "LOON-ghee dal VO-stro LOO-mey" in Pisan Italian.
燕燕 yan(4) yan(4) , name of the protagonist
The answer is the word empty. Take away the e and you have the letters mpty. Take away the p and you have the letters mty. Take away the y and you have the letters mt.
"Vey-LO-tchey"* is the pronunciation of the Italian word veloce. The feminine/masculine singular adjective translates into English as "fast, quick, rapid, swift."*Unlike English, Italian syllables end in vowels. The difference between saying "vey-LO-tchey" Italian-style and "vel-O-tchey" English-style immediately will give away the non-native speaker around native Italian-language speakers.
Weights- take away the 'w' and 's' and you get 'eight'- weights