different between bombinate vs bombinated
bombinate
English
Etymology
From Medieval Latin bombin?re, present active infinitive of bombin? (“buzz, hum”), variant of Latin bombil?, from Ancient Greek ???????????? (bombuliázein), from ?????? (bómbos, “booming, humming”), of imitatory origin.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /?b?mb?ne?t/
Verb
bombinate (third-person singular simple present bombinates, present participle bombinating, simple past and past participle bombinated)
- to buzz or hum
Derived terms
- bombination
Translations
bombinate From the web:
- what bombinate means
- what does nominate mean
- what does ruminate mean in english
- what do bombinate mean
- what does dominate mean
- what does dominate
- what language is bombinate
bombinated
English
Verb
bombinated
- simple past tense and past participle of bombinate
bombinated From the web:
- what bombinate means
- what does dominant mean
- what does bombinate
- what does dominate
Share
Tweet
+1
Share
Pin
Like
Send
Share
you may also like
- bombinate vs bombinated
- bombination vs bombinate
- hum vs bombinate
- buzz vs bombinate
- comminate vs threaten
- comminate vs comminute
- comminated vs comminate
- curse vs comminate
- denounce vs comminate
- action vs hagatai
- art vs hagatai
- pair vs hagatai
- paste vs hagatai
- contest vs hagatai
- ethics vs hagatai
- ignore vs hagatai
- ascertain vs hagatai
- hagatai vs opposite
- conotativo vs basque
- sens vs conotativo