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  2. May 10, 2024 · to lay violent hands on a person: manus inicere, inferre, afferre alicui. to raise one's hands in astonishment: manus tollere. to own oneself conquered, surrender: manus dare. to lead some one by the hand: manu ducere aliquem. to hold something in one's hand: manu or in manu tenere aliquid.

  3. Find manus (Noun) in the Latin Online Dictionary with English meanings, all fabulous forms & inflections and a conjugation table: manus, manus, manui, manum, manus, manuum.

  4. May 14, 2024 · From Latin manus. Compare Catalan mà, French main, Galician man, Italian mano, Occitan man, Portuguese mão, Romanian mână, Spanish mano. Noun [edit] manu. hand; Sicilian [edit] Etymology [edit] From Latin manus (“ hand ”). Noun [edit] manu f (plural manu) hand; Tahitian [edit] Etymology [edit]

  5. Feb 2, 2024 · mānibus m pl. dative / ablative plural of mānēs (“the spirits of dead ancestors; deified shades”) Categories: Latin non-lemma forms. Latin noun forms.

  6. Manus - The Latin Dictionary. Translation. Hand. Main Forms: Manus, Manus. Gender: Feminine. Declension: Fourth. page revision: 3, last edited: 31 May 2010, 10:10 (5098 days ago)

  7. Noun. 1. The hand (of the human body). (b) the forepaw (of such animals as use the paws in the manner of hands). 2. (applied to things resembling hands in use or appearance): (a) (to the trunk of an elephant). (b) (to the twigs of a tree). (c) (to a scalptorium. (d) ~us ferrea, a grappling-iron; also ~us alone. 3.

  8. /ˈmanəs/ MAN-uhss. U.S. English. /ˈmeɪnəs/ MAY-nuhss. /ˈmænəs/ MAN-uhss. Where does the noun manus come from? Earliest known use. late 1500s. manus is a borrowing from Latin. Etymons: Latin manus. Nearby entries. manureless, adj. 1595–.

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