different between actant vs lactant
actant
English
Etymology
Simultaneously coined in English and French by Bruno Latour from action +? -ant
Noun
actant (plural actants)
- (grammar) Any of the participants, such as the subject or object, in a grammatical clause.
Derived terms
- actantial
Translations
French
Etymology
Coined in French by Lucien Tesnière.
Pronunciation
- Homophone: actants
Noun
actant m (plural actants)
- actant
Further reading
- “actant” in Trésor de la langue française informatisé (The Digitized Treasury of the French Language).
Anagrams
- tançât
actant From the web:
- what does reactant mean
- what does actant mean in literature
- what does actant
- what does ashante mean in english
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lactant
English
Etymology
From Latin lactans, present participle of lactare (“to suck”), from lac, lactis (“milk”).
Adjective
lactant (not comparable)
- suckling; giving suck
Latin
Verb
lactant
- third-person plural present active indicative of lact?
lactant From the web:
- what is lactantia milk
- what is lactantia butter
- what does lactate mean
- what does lactate mean in spanish
- what means lactantia
- what does madre lactante mean
- is lactantia milk good
- where to buy lactantia milk
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