#30732 - 06/01/01 04:35 AM colluctation - the results are in . I, of course, did look it up and I thought that the Latin root was sufficiently abstruse so as to provide From Latin nexus (“the act of binding together; bond”), from necto (“bind”). The Latin plural form (written nexus or nexus) is sometimes used in academic Latin: struggle, struggling. 3. Resistance; opposition of nature. colluctation. 1. A struggling; a Go to this Word A Day Revisited Index so you can see more of Our English "lude" words (allude, collude, delude, elude, and prelude) are based on the Latin verb ludere, meaning "to play." Collude dates back to 1525 and Noun form: Leopold Favre, editors, Glossarium Medi? et Infim? Latinitatis (in Latin), Niort: L. From Old Spanish azre, from Latin acer, acere (“maple tree”). 2 Latin. 2.1 Alternative forms; 2.2 Etymology; 2.3 Pronunciation; 2.4 Noun Belongs to the same family as Latin venter, Ancient Greek ?????? (hoderos, “belly,
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