Rest in peace! But to return.2 What a wonderful memory you have too! Twonderful morrowy! Straobinaire! Bene!FW 295:15-17
See also: strå, -stra, stra-, stră- and straFrom Old Norse strá (originally *streyja, but remodeled on the past stem; compare Faroese stroya and stroyggja, Swedish strö, etc.), from Proto-Germanic *strawjaną.
Verb
strá (weak verb, third-person singular past indicative stráði, supine stráð)
- to strew
Etymology
Latin binariusPronunciation
IPA: /bi.nɛʁ/
Homophones: binaires, binèrentAdjective
binaire (plural binaires)
- (mathematics, computing, music) binary
Derived terms
binairementNoun
binaire m (plural binaires)
- (computing) binary file
Further reading
“binaire” in le Trésor de la langue française informatisé (The Digitized Treasury of the French Language).
See also: Bene and bene-
Latin
Etymology
From Old Latin *duenēd, from duenos (“good”), which gave bonus. More at bonus.Pronunciation
(Classical) IPA: /ˈbe.ne/, [ˈbɛ.nɛ]
(Ecclesiastical) IPA: /ˈbe.ne/, [ˈbeː.ne]Adverb
bene (comparative melius, superlative optimē)
- well
- properly, exactly
- agreeably, favorably
Derived terms
benedīcō
benefaciōRelated terms
bonusDescendants
Anglo-Norman: bien
Aragonese: bien
Aromanian: ghini
Asturian: bien
Catalan: bé, ben
Corsican: bè
Dalmatian: bin
Extremaduran: bien
Franco-Provençal: bien, ben-
French: bien
Friulian: ben
Galician: ben
Istriot: ben
Istro-Romanian: bire
Italian: bene
Ladin: ben
Megleno-Romanian: bini
Mirandese: bien
Occitan: ben
Portuguese: bem
Romanian: bine
Romansch: bain, bein
Sardinian: beni
Sicilian: beni
Spanish: bien
Venetian: ben
Walloon: bén
Corinna Del Greco Lobner. “James Joyce and the Italian Language.” Italica, vol. 60, no. 2, 1983, pp. 140–153. JSTOR, www.jstor.org/stable/478545.