![]() ![]() WASHINGTON -The election eve mood is tinged with sadness stemming from well-founded fear that America's new government is subverting America's old character. The election eve mood is tinged with sadness stemming from well-founded fear that America’s new government is subverting America’s old character. Īfter two decades of fighting to clean up the Santa Susana Field Laboratory site, longtime activists say their efforts are being subverted by a Boeing-backed effort to recruit new community voices. The voter ID mess subverts an American birthright. Subverting the Constitution is serious business. It will subvert an election required to end our state constitution's ban on casinos. Is America's second holiday a commercialized travesty, or still a chance to subvert the status quo. ![]() Ī trick for subverting secure transactions is publicized so the bad guys can't exploit it. It is the hypothetical source of/evidence for its existence is provided by: Sanskrit vartate "turns round, rolls " Avestan varet- "to turn " Hittite hurki- "wheel " Greek rhatane "stirrer, ladle " Latin vertere (frequentative versare) "to turn, turn back, be turned convert, transform, translate be changed," versus "turned toward or against " Old Church Slavonic vrŭteti "to turn, roll," Russian vreteno "spindle, distaff " Lithuanian verčiu, versti "to turn " German werden, Old English weorðan "to become " Old English -weard "toward," originally "turned toward," weorthan "to befall," wyrd "fate, destiny," literally "what befalls one " Welsh gwerthyd "spindle, distaff " Old Irish frith "against.This show at Bardot both fits in with the overall electronic Zeitgeist of the week and subverts it. It forms all or part of: adverse anniversary avert awry controversy converge converse (adj.) "exact opposite " convert diverge divert evert extroversion extrovert gaiter introrse introvert invert inward malversation obverse peevish pervert prose raphe reverberate revert rhabdomancy rhapsody rhombus ribald sinistrorse stalwart subvert tergiversate transverse universe verbena verge (v.1) "tend, incline " vermeil vermicelli vermicular vermiform vermin versatile verse (n.) "poetry " version verst versus vertebra vertex vertigo vervain vortex -ward warp weird worm worry worth (adj.) "significant, valuable, of value " worth (v.) "to come to be " wrangle wrap wrath wreath wrench wrest wrestle wriggle wring wrinkle wrist writhe wrong wroth wry. Proto-Indo-European root forming words meaning "to turn, bend." The prefix is active in Modern English, sometimes meaning "subordinate" (as in subcontractor) "inferior" (17c., as in subhuman) "smaller" (18c.) "a part or division of" (c. The original meaning is now obscured in many words from Latin ( suggest, suspect, subject, etc.). In Old French the prefix appears in the full Latin form only "in learned adoptions of old Latin compounds", and in popular use it was represented by sous-, sou- as in French souvenir from Latin subvenire, souscrire (Old French souzescrire) from subscribere, etc. In Latin assimilated to following -c-, -f-, -g-, -p-, and often -r- and -m. Word-forming element meaning "under, beneath behind from under resulting from further division," from Latin preposition sub "under, below, beneath, at the foot of," also "close to, up to, towards " of time, "within, during " figuratively "subject to, in the power of " also "a little, somewhat" (as in sub-horridus "somewhat rough"), from PIE *(s)up- (perhaps representing *ex-upo-), a variant form of the root *upo "under," also "up from under." The Latin word also was used as a prefix and in various combinations. ![]()
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