
cūrāre
cūrō, cūrāre, cūrāvī, cūrātum (1.)
In English: to attend to, to take care of, to provide for, to undertake, to procure
I can't find the question now, but I was looking for someone to tell me - not testing your knowledge. I don't ask questions to which I know the answer. I'm fond of using 'single quotes' for emphasis as much as anything - but then add brackets and you're in trouble.
I think perhaps the clue there is 'heard'. The problem may be on the receive side rather than the transmit. Happens to me a bit these days.
Would that also be a route of Grazing for eating ? Or is that a diferent derivationStanley wrote: ↑31 Jul 2020, 03:14 A good point Peter and what is worse is the underlying mind set it betrays.
Another word leapt out at me, 'greedy'. I found a surprisingly complicated history.
"Old English grædig (West Saxon), gredig (Anglian) "voracious, hungry," also "covetous, eager to obtain," from Proto-Germanic *grædagaz (source also of Old Saxon gradag "greedy," Old Norse graðr "greed, hunger," Danish graadig, Dutch gretig, Old High German gratag "greedy," Gothic gredags "hungry"), from *græduz (source also of Gothic gredus "hunger," Old English grædum "eagerly"), possibly from PIE root *gher- (2) "to like, want" (source of Sanskrit grdh "to be greedy").
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Should Next .... be used, as in a week any day following will be that day. unless it is for an unnecessary emphasis. Following Friday can be rightly Called Friday Week. (which makes not much sense but is understoond).
Is that something that is USA american and is that something grown from there (and not arcane Norfolk or West Country?)
Ken I think.