See also: Averter Averted Avertedly Veteran Veterinarian A Everter Overture Averred Verter Aversion Avert Averse Aver Average Aversive Averment Avery Averting
1. Avertere (present tense Averterer, past tense averterte, past participle avertert) To announce or advertise
Avertere, Averterer, Averterte, Avertert, Announce, Advertise
2. Translation for 'Avertere' in the free Norwegian-English dictionary and many other English translations.
Avertere, And
3. Translation for 'Avertere' in the free Danish-English dictionary and many other English translations.
Avertere, And
4. Entries with "Avertere" averse: averse (English) Origin & history From Latin aversus, past participle of Avertere ("to avert") Pronunciation (Brit
Avertere, Averse, Amp, Aversus, Avert
5. Averterer: Averterer (Latin) Verb āverterer Inflection of āvertō (first-person singular impf passive subjunctive) Averterer (Norwegian Bokmål) Verb Averterer Present tense of Avertere…
Averterer, Avertere
6. Averteret translation in Latin-English dictionary
Averteret
7. Søgning på “Avertere” i Den Danske Ordbog
Avertere
8. Translations for „Avertere“ in the Latin » German Dictionary (Go to German » Latin) Show summary of all matches ā-vertō aversator aversio aversor aversus Avertere ā-vertō <āvertere, āvertī, āversum> View Verb Table
Avertere, All, Aversator, Aversio, Aversor, Aversus
9. This noun is from Latin avertio, ultimately from Avertere "to turn away," from the prefix a- "from" plus vertere "to turn." Near synonyms are repugnance and antipathy.
Avertio, Avertere, Away, Are, And, Antipathy
10. Origin Late Middle English (in the sense ‘divert or deter someone from a place or a course of action’): from Latin Avertere, from ab- ‘from’ + vertere ‘to turn’; reinforced by Old French avertir.
Action, Avertere, Ab, Avertir
11. Avertere's profile including the latest music, albums, songs, music videos and more updates.
Avertere, Albums, And
12. Iter flectere, convertere, Avertere Rate this phrase: (0.00 / 0 votes) to deviate, change the direction
Avertere
13. Translation Find a translation for the iter flectere, convertere, Avertere
Avertere
14. Origin avert (1300-1400) Old French avertir, from Latin Avertere, from ad-“ to ” + vertere “ to turn ” Quizzes Take our quick quizzes to practise your vocabulary.
Avert, Avertir, Avertere, Ad
15. When attached to a prefix stemming from the element ad-, it yields the verb avert (from the Latin verb Avertere, meaning “turn away”), which retains the sense of its etymological source (usually in the sense of prevention) and the adjective averse, meaning “disinclined,” and the noun aversion, describing a disinclination bordering on
Attached, Ad, Avert, Avertere, Away, And, Adjective, Averse, Aversion
16. Aversion (n.) 1590s, "a turning away from;" 1650s in the figurative sense of "mental attitude of repugnance or opposition," from French aversion (16c.) and directly from Latin aversionem (nominative aversio), noun of action from past-participle stem of aversus "turned away, backwards, behind, hostile," itself past participle of Avertere "to turn away" (see avert).
Aversion, Away, Attitude, And, Aversionem, Aversio, Action, Aversus, Avertere, Avert
17. Late Middle English (in the sense ‘divert or deter someone from a place or a course of action’): from Latin Avertere, from ab- ‘from’ + vertere ‘to turn’; reinforced by Old French avertir.
Action, Avertere, Ab, Avertir
18. Although the etymology of the name is often connected to the Latin verb Avertere, "to turn away," a more probable origin lies in averro "to
Although, Avertere, Away, Averro
19. Word Origin late Middle English (in the sense ‘divert or deter someone from a place or a course of action’): from Latin Avertere, from ab-‘from’ + vertere ‘to turn’; reinforced by Old French avertir.
Action, Avertere, Ab, Avertir
20. Anna-Karin Korhonen Ja Avertere is a English album released on Nov 2008
Anna, Avertere, Album
21. Anna-Karin Korhonen Ja Avertere Album has 9 songs sung by Anna-Karin Korhonen Ja Avertere
Anna, Avertere, Album
22. Listen to all songs in high quality & download Anna-Karin Korhonen Ja Avertere songs on Gaana.com
All, Amp, Anna, Avertere
23. Translation Find a translation for the Avertere pecuniam (Verr
Avertere
24. Word Origin late 16th cent.: from Latin aversus ‘turned away from’, past participle of Avertere, from ab-‘from’ + vertere ‘to turn’
Aversus, Away, Avertere, Ab
25. Avertere (現在 Averterer; 過去 averterte; 過去分詞 avertert; 受動不定詞 averterast; 現在分詞 averterande; 命令 Avertere/averter) 発表 する。 公表 する。
Avertere, Averterer, Averterte, Avertert, Averterast, Averterande, Averter
26. Avertere (Latin) Trending Searches 🔥 creative challenge beautiful schmuck negative-impact define white-person gujarati focus for-the-first-time assimilate more-likely potential cohesiveness perspective out-of-the-box thinking assistance know-it-all antonym center
Avertere, Assimilate, Assistance, All, Antonym
AVERTERE [ˈōvərCHər, ˈōvərˌCHo͝or]
Definition of avert. transitive verb. 1 : to turn away or aside (the eyes, one's gaze, etc.) in avoidance I found the sight so grotesque that I had to avert my eyes …— John Gregory Dunne. 2 : to see coming and ward off : avoid avert disaster.
Definition of averse. : having an active feeling of repugnance, dislike, or distaste —usually used with toShe was not averse to taking chances.He seems to be averse to strenuous exercise.
verb (used with object) to turn away or aside: to avert one's eyes. to ward off; prevent: to avert evil; to avert an accident.
Definition of avert. transitive verb. 1 : to turn away or aside (the eyes, one's gaze, etc.) in avoidance I found the sight so grotesque that I had to avert my eyes …— John Gregory Dunne. 2 : to see coming and ward off : avoid avert disaster.