Portare
Q. What is the origin of the word port?
Port comes from the Latin word portus, meaning “haven” or “harbor.” You can hear this sense of a port as a place of safe arrival in the proverb “any port in a storm.” On a ship, the port side is the left side. Port is also a verb, meaning “to carry.”
Table of Contents
- Q. What is the origin of the word port?
- Q. What is the prefix for carry?
- Q. Is Fer a word?
- Q. What is the root word of preferred?
- Q. What is another word for preferred?
- Q. What’s the meaning of preferred?
- Q. What type of word is preferred?
- Q. Does preferred mean required?
- Q. How do spell preferred?
- Q. What is the antonym of preferred?
- Q. What is a antonym for investigate?
- Q. Whats another word for should?
- Q. Is ought a formal word?
- Q. What is the difference between GOT and gotten?
- Q. When we use have and have got?
Q. What is the prefix for carry?
PREFIX, OR SUFFIX | BASIC MEANING | DEFINITION |
---|---|---|
-ferent | carrying | carry toward |
-form | in the form of | wedge-shaped |
hyper- | above, beyond | extension beyond normal |
hypo- | under, below | below the pharynx |
Q. Is Fer a word?
FER is a valid scrabble word.
Q. What is the root word of preferred?
The adverb preferably refers to the most desirable choice. As preferably is the adverb form of the word “prefer,” we can find its roots in the Latin praeferre, which means “to set before.” When you use preferably you’re saying you’d set that choice before all others, though you might accept something else.
Q. What is another word for preferred?
In this page you can discover 46 synonyms, antonyms, idiomatic expressions, and related words for preferred, like: chosen, selected, neglected, fancied, promoted, settled upon, sanctioned, decided upon, unpreferred, overlooked and favourite.
Q. What’s the meaning of preferred?
liked better or best
Q. What type of word is preferred?
verb (used with object), pre·ferred, pre·fer·ring. to set or hold before or above other persons or things in estimation; like better; choose rather than: to prefer beef to chicken.
Q. Does preferred mean required?
Required skills, which means “You’d better have this, or don’t bother applying.” Preferred skills, which means “We’d really like it if you know how to do this because it’s important.” Desired skills, which means “It would be cool if you knew how to do this.”
Q. How do spell preferred?
Correct spelling for the English word “preferred” is [pɹɪfˈɜːd], [pɹɪfˈɜːd], [p_ɹ_ɪ_f_ˈɜː_d] (IPA phonetic alphabet).
Q. What is the antonym of preferred?
What is the opposite of preferred?
unpreferred | undesirable |
---|---|
unbeloved | nonpreferred |
unpopular | least preferred |
disfavored | unfavoured |
nonprefered | least favored |
Q. What is a antonym for investigate?
investigation. Antonyms: discovery, solution, clue, indication, thread. Synonyms: examination, search, scrutiny, research, study, inquiry, exploration, ventilation.
Q. Whats another word for should?
What is another word for should?
ought to | had better |
---|---|
must | had best |
better | need to |
have a duty to | want to |
will want to be sure to | will want to |
Q. Is ought a formal word?
Ought to has the same meaning as the modal should, and it is used in the same ways, but ought to is less common and more formal than should. Modal verbs are verbs that are not conjugated. They are used to signal things like obligations, expectations, advice, and suggestions.
Q. What is the difference between GOT and gotten?
Past Participles: “Got” and “Gotten” in American English We use “got” when referring to a state of owning or possessing something. We use “gotten” when referring to a process of “getting” something.
Q. When we use have and have got?
When we are talking about possession, relationships, illnesses and characteristics of people or things we can use either have or have got. The have got forms are more common in an informal style. Have got has the same meaning as have and both are used as present tenses.