Copyright © Philip M. Parker, INSEAD. Terms of Use.

Definition: Weave |
WeaveNoun1. Pattern of weaving or structure of a fabric. Verb1. Interlace as if weaving. 2. Of textiles; create a piece of cloth by interlacing strands of fabric, such as wool or cotton. 3. Sway to and fro. 4. To move or cause to move in a sinuous, spiral, or circular course; "the river winds through the hills"; "the path meanders through the vineyards"; "sometimes, the gout wanders through the entire body". Source: WordNet 1.7.1 Copyright © 2001 by Princeton University. All rights reserved. |
Date "weave" was first used in popular English literature: sometime before 1010. (references) |
Note: Weave \Weave\, transitive verb. [imperfect Wove; past participle Woven, Wove; Weaving. The regular imp. & past participle. Weaved, is rarely used.]. (references) |
| Domain | Definition |
Industry | The pattern of interlacing of warp and weft in a woven fabric. Source: European Union. (references) |
Source: compiled by the editor from various references; see credits. | |
(From Wikipedia, the free Encyclopedia)
Weaving is an ancient textile art and craft that involves placing two threads or yarn made of fibre onto a warp and weft of a loom and turning them into cloth. This cloth can be plain (in one colour or a simple pattern), or it can be woven in decorative or artistic designs, including tapestries.There are many kinds of weaving. A great many commercial fabrics are woven on a large variety of automatic dobbie looms with the more intricate tapestries woven on Jacquard looms. However, many craftspeople still use hand looms to produce fine fabrics and tapestries in a traditional manner.
History of Weaving
Enslaved women worked as weavers during the Sumerian Era. They would wash wool fibers in hot water and wood-ash soap and then dry them. Next, they would beat out the dirt and card the wool. The wool was then graded, bleached, and spun into a thread. The spinners would pull out fibers and twist them together. This was done by either rolling fibers between palms or using a hooked stick. The thread was then placed on a wooden or bone spindle and rotated on a clay whorl which operated like a flywheel.
The slaves would then work in three-woman teams on looms, where they stretched the threads, after which they passed threads over and under each other at perpendicular angles. The cloth was then taken to a fuller.
The text below was originally at "Weavers weaving" and is to be integrated with this the above.
This is an article from the public domain Easton's Bible Dictionary, originally published in 1897. This article is written from a nineteenth century Christian viewpoint, and may not reflect modern opinions or recent discoveries in Biblical scholarship. Please help the Wikipedia by bringing this article up to date.
Weavers Weaving - Weaving was an art practised in very early times (Ex. 35:35). The Egyptians were specially skilled in it (Isa. 19:9; Ezek. 27:7), and some have regarded them as its inventors.
In the wilderness, the Hebrews practised it (Ex. 26:1, 8; 28:4, 39; Lev. 13:47). It is referred to in subsequent times as specially the women's work (2 Kings 23:7; Prov. 31:13, 24). No mention of the loom is found in Scripture, but we read of the "shuttle" (Job 7:6), "the pin" of the beam (Judg. 16:14), "the web" (13, 14), and "the beam" (1 Sam. 17:7; 2 Sam. 21:19). The rendering, "with pining sickness," in Isa. 38:12 (A.V.) should be, as in the Revised Version, "from the loom," or, as in the margin, "from the thrum." We read also of the "warp" and "woof" (Lev. 13:48, 49, 51-53, 58, 59), but the Revised Version margin has, instead of "warp," "woven or knitted stuff."
From Easton's Bible Dictionary (1897)
In computer science, weaving describes the process of combining different aspects into a complete application. See Aspect-oriented programming.
Source: adapted by the editor from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia under a copyleft GNU Free Documentation License (GFDL) from the article "Weaving."
Synonyms: WeaveSynonyms: interweave (v), meander (v), thread (v), tissue (v), wander (v), waver (v), wind (v). (additional references) |
| Antonym: unweave (v). (additional references) |
| Context | Synonyms within Context (source: adapted from Roget's Thesaurus). |
Crossing | Twine, entwine, weave, inweave, twist, wreathe; anastomose, inosculate, dovetail, splice, link; lace, tat. |
Cunning | Dodge, sidestep, bob and weave. |
Difficulty | Grope in the dark, lose one's way, weave a tangled web, walk among eggs. |
Impossibility | Attempt impossibilities; square the circle, wash a blackamoor white; skin a flint; make a silk purse out of a sow's ear, make bricks without straw; have nothing to go upon; weave a rope of sand, build castles in the air, prendre la lune avec les dents, extract sunbeams from cucumbers, set the Thames on fire, milk a he-goat into a sieve, catch a weasel asleep, rompre l'anguille au genou, be in two places at once. |
Production | Verb: produce, perform, operate, do, make, gar, form, construct, fabricate, frame, contrive, manufacture; weave, forge, coin, carve, chisel; build, raise, edify, rear, erect, put together, set up, run up; establish, compose, organize, institute; achieve, accomplish; (complete). |
| Source: adapted from Roget's Thesaurus. | |
| Domain | Usage | |
Lyrics | I'mma bob and weave (Take Your Time; performing artist: HOT) This broad is quick to copy every time I get a new weave (Get Away; performing artist: Jade) They catching contact, weed smoke all up in the weave (Hey Papi; performing artist: Jay-Z) Perm in your hair or even a curly weave (Around the Way Girl; performing artist: L.L. Cool J) That old black magic that you weave so well ("That Old Black Magic"; performing artist: Louis Prima & Keely Smith) | |
Movie/TV Titles | Border Weave (1942) | |
Source: compiled by the editor from various references; see credits. | ||
| Domain | Title | ||
Books |
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Theater & Movies | |||
High Tech |
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Consumer Goods | |||
Source: compiled by the editor from various references; see credits. | |||
| Thumbnail | Description & Credit | Thumbnail | Description & Credit |
![]() | A road through the live oak forest on Cabretta. The shadows weave a wonderful texture on the road surface. Credit: America's Coastlines. | ![]() | We will meet, all of us women of every land; we will meet in the center, make a circle; we will weave a world web to entangle ... Credit: Library of Congress. |
Source: pictures compiled by the editor from various references; see picture credits. | |||
| Author | Quotation |
Horace Mann | Habit is a cable. We weave a thread of it every day, and at last we cannot break it. |
James Russell Lowell | The mind can weave itself warmly in the cocoon of its own thoughts, and dwell a hermit anywhere. |
Source: compiled by the editor from various references. | |
| Subject | Topic | Quote |
Worker Rights | Burma | Many detailed credible reports indicate that in recent years, especially in areas inhabited chiefly by members of the Chin, Karen, Karenni, and Shan ethnic groups, army units have increased their use of forced labor for logistical support purposes, including to build, repair, or maintain army camps and roads, and to plant crops, cut or gather wood, cook, clean, launder, weave baskets, fetch water for army units and -- in the case of young women -- to provide sexual services to soldiers. (references) |
Source: compiled by the editor from ICON Group International, Inc.; see credits. | ||
| Speaker | Term | Phrase(s) |
John Quincy Adams | 1825-1829 | But the cotton, indispensable for their looms, they will receive almost duty free to weave it into a fabric for our own wear, to the destruction of our own manufactures, which they are enabled thus to under-sell. |
Jimmy Carter | 1977-1981 | Neighborhoods define the weave that has been used to create a permanent fabric. |
Bill Clinton | 1993-2001 | We must remember that America cannot lead in the world unless here at home we weave the threads of our coat of many colors into the fabric of one America. |
Source: compiled by the editor from various references. | ||
| "Weave" is generally used as a lexical verb (infinitive) -- approximately 42.76% of the time. "Weave" is used about 290 times out of a sample of 100 million words spoken or written in English. Its rank is based on over 700,000 words used in the English language. Some parts-of-speech are not covered due to the samples used by the British National Corpus. (note: percents less than one-hundredth of one percent have been omitted) |
| Parts of Speech | Percent | Usage per 100 Million Words | Rank in English |
| Lexical Verb (infinitive) | 42.76% | 124 | 28,785 |
| Noun (singular) | 33.1% | 96 | 33,456 |
| Lexical Verb (base form) | 24.14% | 70 | 39,981 |
| Total | 100.00% | 290 | N/A |
Source: compiled by the editor from several corpora; see credits.
Expressions using "weave": basket weave ♦ bob and weave ♦ folk weave ♦ Grecian weave ♦ open weave ♦ plain weave ♦ satin weave ♦ taffeta weave ♦ twill weave ♦ weave a rope of sand ♦ weave a tangled web ♦ weave in ♦ weave into ♦ weave repeat ♦ weave tighter ♦ weave together ♦ wove weave. Additional references. | |
| Hyphenated Usage | |
Beginning with "weave": weave-on. | |
Ending with "weave": basket-weave, plain-weave. | |
| Source: compiled by the editor from various references; see credits. | |
| The following statistics estimate the number of searches per day across the major English-language search engines as identified by various trade publications. Hyperlinks lead to commercial use of the expression at Amazon.com. |
| Language | Translations for "weave"; alternative meanings/domain in parentheses. | |
Albanian | end. (various references) | |
Arabic | فرع (branch, department, fork, offshoot, ramify, section), نسج (interweave, knit, spin, spun), حاك (abrasive, knit), حبك (crochet, knitting), تمايل (bob, flexibility, lopsided, lurch, nod, reel, roll, stagger, sway, swing, teeter, titubation, waver, wobble), تذبذب (balance, fluctuation, gyrate, oscillate, pulsate, vacillate, vacillation, vibrate, vibration, wave, waver, whiffle, wiggle, wobble), ترنح (beat about the bush, falter, feel groggy, grogginess, halt, limp, lurch, quiver, reel, rock, roll, shake, stagger, stumble, teeter, titubation, totter, walk with a wobble, waver, welter), طريقة النسج, إتخذ سبيلا متمعجا, رسم (block, charge, daub, depict, depiction, describe, description, design, draft, draught, draw, drawing, etch, etching, exhibit, figure to oneself, formalize, image, impost, lay, lay out, limn, line, mark out, pattern, pencil, picture, plotter, portray, portrayal, protract, scrawl, sketch, tableau, trace, trace over), شق طريقه (break, crowd, force one's way, jostle, pass, press, push, push away). (various references) | |
Blackfoot | ssksimataki (to weave). (various references) | |
Bulgarian | тъкан (cloth, contexture, fabric, textile, tissue, web, weft, woof), тъка, вмъквам (bring, bring in, inject, insert, inset, interject, interpolate, interpose, parenthesize, put in, run in, slip, throw in, work, work in), вплитам (braid, entangle, interlace, intertwist, inweave, strand), вия се (coil, creep, curl, entwine, ramp, run, serpentine, twist, wheel, wind, wound, wreathe, writhe), начин на тъкане, преплитам (entwine, inosculate, interlace, intertwine, intertwist, interweave, inweave, lock, twine), измислям (coin, conceive, concoct, contrive, cook up, devise, dream up, evolve, excogitate, fabricate, fake, feign, figure out, frame up, incubate, invent, manufacture, think up, trump), движа се на зиг-заг (zigzag). (various references) | |
Chinese | " , 編製 (authorized strength, braid, draw up, establishment, plait, work out), 編" (braid, knit, plait), 編 (arrange, compile, compose, edit, fabricate, group, organize, plait, write), 织法. (various references) | |
Czech | vetkat (inweave), vazba (arrest, binding, committal, contexture, custody, detention, government, hunk, linkage, ward), tkanina (cloth, fabric, textile, tissue, weft, woof), tkát (spin), spřádat (throw), plést (hand-knit, knit, plait, twist, wreathe), kout (angle, corner, forge, nook, strike). (various references) | |
Danish | væve. (various references) | |
Dutch | weven (weaving). (various references) | |
Esperanto | teksi. (various references) | |
Faeroese | veva. (various references) | |
Farsi | ساختن (Build, Compose, Establish, Form, Invent, Make, Manufacture, Mint, Model, Move, Prepare, Upbuild), درست کردن (Adapt, Address, Agree, Build, Clean, Compose, Concoct, Devise, Emend, Fix, Gully, Integrate, Make, Mend, Organize, Redd, Regulate, Right, Straighten, Trim), بافندگی (Texture), بافتن (Knit, Tine), بافت (Fiber-Fibre, Texture, Tissue). (various references) | |
Finnish | kutoa. (various references) | |
French | tramer, tisser, tissage (weaving). (various references) | |
German | weben (spin, to weave (wove, weaving), wirken (act, act on, appear, be at work, be effective, come across, have an effect, have effect, knit, operate, react, seem, take action, to act, to operate, to take effect, work), Webart, Bindung (attachment, binding, bond, bonds, commitment, fixation, liaison, relationship, slur, tie). (various references) | |
Greek | ύφανση (texture, weaving), υφαίνω. (various references) | |
Hawaiian | end. (various references) | |
Hebrew | מאר' (contexture, fabric, texture, web), לשזור (entwine, interlace, intertwine, spin, twine, twist, wreathe), לארו', ל"שתות (establish, found, warp), לטוות (spin), לרקום (design, devise, embroider, form, shape, variegate). (various references) | |
Hungarian | szövés. (various references) | |
Indonesian | menggedok, menenun, gedok. (various references) | |
Irish | figh. (various references) | |
Italian | tessere (inweave). (various references) | |
Japanese Kanji | "り (weaving, woven item), " (weaving, woven item). (various references) | |
Japanese Katakana | おり (cage, chance, jail cell, pen, suitable time, weaving, woven item). (various references) | |
Korean | 직물 (Fabric, textile, tissue). (various references) | |
Manx | joltaghey (prance, traverse), jannoo fidderaght, fidderaght (texture, weaving), fee (braid, interlace, intertwine, knit, mat; ravens, plait, wreathe). (various references) | |
Maya | sakt (to weave). (various references) | |
Pig Latin | eaveway.(various references) | |
Portuguese | tecer (spin, twist). (various references) | |
Romanian | urzi un complot (hatch a plot, lay a plot, lay a scheme), pune la cale un complot, model de ţesãturã, lucra la rãzboi, croşeta (crochet), împleti (braid, criss cross, entwine, entwist, interlace, intertwine, interweave, knit, mat, mesh, plait, plash, twine, work, wreathe), ţese (concoct, darn, embroider, hatch, spin, work, wove weave). (various references) | |
Romany | kat v (to weave). (various references) | |
Russian | ткать (wove, woven). (various references) | |
Scottish | figh. (various references) | |
Serbo-Croatian | utkati (interweave, inweave), tkati, oplesti (braid, lace, wed), krivudati (meander), istkati. (various references) | |
Shona | -ruka (to weave). (various references) | |
Spanish | tejer (crochet, knit, twine). (various references) | |
Swazi | kw-éluka (to weave). (various references) | |
Swedish | väva, sammanfläta (interlace, inweave), bindning (binding, liaison, slurring). (various references) | |
Turkish | zikzak yapmak (herringbone, zigzag), zikzak çizmek (zigzag), yapmak (accomplish, achieve, acquit oneself, act, architect, build, carry out, carve out, contrive, create, do, engineer, establish, execute, fashion, father, fulfil, fulfill, get, go over, go through, have, implement, land, make, perform, perpetrate, ply, practice, practise, produce, profess, put on, put through, set, take, transact, turn out), serpiştirmek (Dot, dredge, drizzle, intersperse, spit, splash, splatter, sprinkle, strew), kurmak (activate, base, build, build up, cog, conspire, constitute, construct, erect, establish, fix up, float, form, found, frame, ground, install, institute, lay, line up, organize, pitch, plant, promote, put, put together, ruminate, set, set up, start, strike up, time, wind up), katmak (add, adjoin, affiliate, ally, annex, append, include, incorporate, inosculate, integrate, interpolate, join, load, mingle, mix, number, put in, run in, superadd, tack, tinge), karıştırmak (add, admix, amalgamate, blend, churn, commingle, commix, complicate, concoct, confound, confuse, darken, diffuse, disarrange, disarray, discompose, disconcert, disorder, disorganize, disturb, embroil, entangle, ferret about, foul, foul up, hash, implicate, interfuse, interlace, interlard, intermingle, intermix, involve, inweave, jumble, jumble together, jumble up, knot, litter, make hay of smth., meld, mess, mess smth. about, mess up, mingle, mistake, mix, mix up, monkey around with, monkey with, muddle, muss, pick, poke, poke up, Ravel, ruffle, scramble, scramble together, scramble up, shuffle, snarl, stir, stir up, tamper with, tangle, tousle, trim, tumble, unsettle), dokumak (knit), dokuma (contexture, fabric, knitted, piece goods, soft goods, textile, textiles, weaving, web, webbing, woof, woven), örmek (bond, braid, build, entwist, hand-knit, knit, plait, spin, twine), örme (darning, knitting, netting, plaiting, weaving). (various references) | |
Turkmen | dokamak. (various references) | |
Ukrainian | ухилятися (avoid, back out, balk, blench, crawfish, depart, digress, dodge, elude, equivocate, eschew, evade, flunk, jink, obviate, prevaricate, shirk, shuffle, sidestep, squirm, weasel, wriggle), узор (tracery), снувати (buzz), сплітати (entwine, intertwine, pleach, raddle, wreathe), розмахувати (flourish, swish, throw about), хитатися (niddle-noddle, nod, nutate, oscillate, rock, shake, stagger, swing, titter, wabble, wamble, waver, wobble), ткацьке сплетіння, ткати, торочити, шастати (buzz, skirr), гойдатися (dangle, oscillate, seesaw, tilt, wag, waggle), візерунок, переплітатися (interlace), плести (entwine, knit, plat, strand, wattle). (various references) | |
Vietnamese | kiểu (gauge, model, replica, shape, style, wove, woven), dệt (textile, wove, woven). (various references) | |
Welsh | ystofi (plan, warp), plethu (braid, fold, plait), gweu (knit), gwau (knit), eilio (alternate, plait, second, sing). (various references) | |
Yucatec | wak'. (various references) | |
| Source: compiled by the editor from various translation references. | ||
| Language | Period | Translations |
| Latin | 500 BCE-Modern | iannes, intexui, intexuit, ne, nebo, nemini, nemus, neque, neri, neverant, nili, texant, texebant, texente, texere, texi, texit, texta, textere, textura, texturam, texuerunt. (various references) |
| Old English | 450-1100 | bregdan. (various references) |
| Source: compiled by the editor from various references. | ||
| Language | Date | Source | Isaiah Chapter 19, Verse 9 |
| Greek (transliterated) | 250 BC | Septuagint | Kai aiscunh lhmyetai touV ergazomenouV to linon to sciston kai touV ergazomenouV thn busson |
| Latin | 405 | Vulgate | Confundentur qui operabantur linum pectentes et texentes subtilia |
| Middle English | 1395 | Wyclif | And confoundid shul ben, that wroyten flax, plattende and weuende sotile thingus. |
| Jacobean English | 1611 | King James | Moreover they that work in fine flax, and they that weave networks, shall be confounded. |
| Victorian English | 1833 | Webster | Moreover they that work in fine flax, and they that weave net-works shall be confounded. |
| Basic English | 1964 | Ogden | And all the workers in linen thread, and those who make cotton cloth, will be put to shame. |
Source: compiled by the editor from various references; see credits. | |||
| Language | Isaiah Chapter 19, Verse 9 |
| Cebuano | Labut pa, mangalibog kadtong managkigi ug lino, ug kadtong managhabol ug maputing panapton. |
| Croatian | Postidjet æe se lanari, grebenari i tkaèi bijela tkanja. |
| Danish | Til Skamme er de, som væver Linned, Heglersker og de, som væver Byssus; |
| Dutch | En de werkers in het fijne vlas zullen beschaamd worden, ook de wevers van de witte stof. |
| Finnish | Häpeään joutuvat, jotka häkilöityjä pellavia pitelevät ja jotka kutovat pellavakankaita. |
| French | Ceux qui travaillent le lin peigné Et qui tissent des étoffes blanches seront confus. |
| German | Es werden mit Schanden bestehen, die da gute Garne wirken und Netze stricken. |
| Haitian Creole | Moun ki te konn fè bèl twal swa yo pral dekouraje. Sa ki te konn tise lenn yo, sa ki te konn tise bèl twal blan yo pral nan lafliksyon. |
| Hungarian | És megszégyenülnek a fésült len készítõi és a gyolcs szövõi. |
| Indonesian-Bahasa Sehari-hari | mereka dan buruh upahan akan bersedih hati dan patah semangat. |
| Indonesian-Terjemahan Lama | Segala orang yang pandai pada rami dan kain khasah dan mereka sekalian yang bertenun kain kapas itupun kemalu-maluanlah. |
| Italian | Saranno delusi i lavoratori del lino, le cardatrici e i tessitori impallidiranno; |
| Maori | Ka whakama hoki nga kaimahi o te muka pai, ratou ko nga kaiwhatu o nga kakahu ma. |
| Norwegian | og de som arbeider med heklet lin, blir til skamme, og de som vever fint hvitt tøi. |
| Portuguese | Envergonhar-se-ão os que trabalham em linho fino, e os que tecem pano branco. |
| Rumanian | Ceice lucreazq inul dqrqcit, wi ceice yes yesqturi albe vor fi acoperiyi, de ruwine, |
| Russian | Й 'Х"ХФ Ч УНХЭЕОЙЙ П'ТБ'БФЩЧБАЭЙЕ МЕО Й ФЛБЮЙ 'ЕМЩИ ПМПФЕО; |
| Spanish | Serán confundidos los que trabajan el lino, y los que tejen lino cardado palidecerán. |
| Swedish | De som arbeta i häcklat lin skola komma på skam, så ock de som väva fina tyger. |
| Ukrainian | А ті, що працюють при чесанім льоні та тчуть полотно, засоромляться. |
Source: compiled by the editor from various references; see credits. | |
Derivations | |
Words beginning with "weave": weaved, weaver, weaverbird, weaverbirds, weavers, weaves. (additional references) | |
Words ending with "weave": interweave, inweave, reweave, unweave. (additional references) | |
Words containing "weave": interweaved, interweaves, inweaved, inweaves, reweaved, reweaves, unweaves. (additional references) | |
| |
"Weave" is suggested in spellcheckers for the following: feave, geave, keave, teave, wavw, weaf, weale, weaqe, wease, weav, weavea, weavel, weavey, weavle, weavs, weaze, Weegee, weeva, weeve, weevy, weige, weof, werve, weve, wevel, wevi, whave, wheve, woeve, wrave. (additional references) | |
| Source: compiled by the editor, based on several corpora (additional references). | |
| # of Phoneme Matches | Pronunciation | Word(s) rhyming with "weave" (pronounced wē"v) |
| 3 | w ē" v | interweave. |
| 2 | -ē" v | achieve, aggrieve, believe, bereave, cleave, conceive, deceive, disbelieve, eave, eve, greave, grieve, heave, Interleave, leave, misconceive, misperceive, naive, neve, peeve, perceive, preconceive, reave, receive, Reeve, relieve, reprieve, retrieve, sleeve, Vive. |
Source: compiled by the editor (additional references); see credits. | ||
Scrabble® Enable2K-Verified Anagrams | |
| Words within the letters "a-e-e-v-w" | |
-1 letter: awee, eave, wave. | |
-2 letters: ave, awe, eve, ewe, vaw, vee, wae, wee. | |
-3 letters: ae, aw, we. | |
| Words containing the letters "a-e-e-v-w" | |
+1 letter: weaved, weaver, weaves. | |
+2 letters: inweave, overawe, reweave, unweave, wavelet, wavered, waverer, weavers. | |
+3 letters: alewives, everyway, inweaved, inweaves, ovenware, overawed, overawes, overweak, overwear, reavowed, reviewal, reweaved, reweaves, unweaves, viewable, waveless, wavelets, wavelike, waverers, whatever. | |
+4 letters: kalewives, ovenwares, overwater, overwears, overweary, reviewals, reweaving, superwave, waveguide, waveshape. | |
+5 letters: everywoman, heavenward, interweave, overwarmed, overwaters, reviewable, silverware, superwaves, waveguides, wavelength, wavelessly, waveshapes, wavinesses, weaverbird, whatsoever. | |
| Source: compiled by the editor from various references; see credits. SCRABBLE® is a registered trademark. All intellectual property rights in and to the game are owned in the U.S.A and Canada by Hasbro Inc., and throughout the rest of the world by J.W. Spear & Sons Limited of Maidenhead, Berkshire, England, a subsidiary of Mattel Inc. Mattel and Spear are not affiliated with Hasbro. | |
| 1. Definition 2. Synonyms 3. Crosswords 4. Usage: Modern | 5. Usage: Commercial 6. Images: Slideshow 7. Images: Photo Album 8. Quotations: Familiar | 9. Quotations: Non-fiction 10. Quotations: Speeches 11. Usage Frequency 12. Expressions | 13. Expressions: Internet 14. Translations: Modern 15. Translations: Ancient 16. Bible Trace | 17. Derivations 18. Rhymes 19. Anagrams 20. Bibliography |
Copyright © Philip M. Parker, INSEAD. Terms of Use.