What do dream about Stranded word really mean?

Search results for Stranded word:

Break your word

Traditionally:

European

- To break your own word in dream: they avoids you because of your bad qualities;

- Dreaming that someone else breaking up his word: you should avoid this person, because of his evil characteristics.

Goats

… whirlwind speaking, the term “an approaching goat storm of” (Homer: Iliad 2.148; Artemidorus word game based on the syllable “aig” in the phrase “Labros epaigizon” = an approaching goat Santander Viktor.), and the most dangerous sea states Aigaion. Marriages, friendships and

Communities bring it neither reached nor give existing life, they unite in fact not to herd, but grazing as a loner on slopes and cliffs and make of it, and the shepherd’s life difficult, therefore, called …

Mugwort

… is one of several species in the genus Artemisia which have common names that include the word mugwort. This species is also occasionally known as Felon Herb, Chrysanthemum Weed, Wild Wormwood, Old uncle Henry, Sailor’s Tobacco, Naughty Man, Old Man or St. John’s Plant (not to be confused with St John’s wort).

Synonyms of mugwort

– ; related terms: genus Artemisia, wormwood, Artemisia gnaphalodes, Artemisia ludoviciana, prairie sage, western mugwort, white sage, …

Desire

… disgrace.

Explanation & Definition:

Short explanation

More formal or stronger word for want.

Complete definition

To express a wish for; request.

Synonyms of desire

verb: wish, want, will, crave, like, yearn, long, covet; noun: wish, longing, craving, request, lust, will, want, appetite, yearning, aspiration; plural: wishes, longings, cravings, requests, lusts, wills, wants, appetites, yearnings, aspirations; related terms: feeling, ambition, aspiration, …

Bastard

… fucker, motherfucker, prick, asshole, son of a bitch, whoreson, cocksucker, SOB, shit, dirty word, vulgarism, obscenity, smut, filth, disagreeable person, unpleasant person.

Basilica

… a semicircular apse, side aisles, a narthex and a clerestory.

Complete definition

The Latin word basilica (derived from Greek, βασιλική στοά, Royal Stoa, the tribunal chamber of a king), was originally used to describe a Roman public building, usually located in the forum of a Roman town. Public basilicas began to appear in Hellenistic cities in the 2nd century BC.

Synonyms of basilica

- ; related terms: church building, church, narthex.

Bazaar

… of merchants, bankers and craftsmen” who work that area. Although the current meaning of the word is believed to have originated in Persia, its use has spread and now has been accepted into the vernacular in countries around the world. The rise of large bazaars and stock trading centers in the Muslim World allowed the creation of new capitals and eventually new empires. New and wealthy cities such as Isfahan, Golconda, Samarkand, Cairo, Baghdad, and Timbuktu were founded along trade …

Launch (boat)

… The name originally referred to the largest boat carried by a warship. The etymology of the word is given as Portuguese lancha “barge”, from Malay lancha, lancharan, “boat,” from lanchar “velocity without effort,” “action of gliding smoothly” (said primarily of boats and turtles). In the 1700s a launch was used to set the large anchors on a ship. They had a square transom and were about 24 feet long – In 1788 Captain Bligh was set adrift in the “Bounty’s Launch”. …

Barrack

… Complete definition

Barracks are specialised buildings for permanent military accommodation; the word may apply to separate housing blocks or to complete complexes. Their main object is to separate soldiers from the civilian population and reinforce discipline, training and esprit de corps. They were sometimes called discipline factories for soldiers. Like industrial factories, they are sometimes synonymous with shoddy or dull buildings although there are examples of magnificent architecture …

Banner

… of cloth bearing a symbol, logo, slogan or other message. Banner-making is an ancient craft.

The word derives from late Latin bandum, a cloth out of which a flag is made (Latin: banderia, Italian: bandiera, Portuguese: bandeira, Spanish: bandera). The German language developed the word to mean an official edict or proclamation and since such written orders often prohibited some form of human activity, bandum assumed the meaning of a ban, control, interdict or excommunication. Banns has the …