sive
1Sive — is a play by Irish playwright John B. Keane that depicts Irish rural life in the 1950s. The main character of the play is Sive, yet she rarely speaks in the play. This ultimately enhances the impact of the whole play on the audience. We get a… …
2Sive — f Irish: Anglicized form of Gaelic SADHBH (SEE Sadhbh). Sive is the title of a popular contemporary play by John B. Keene …
3sive — Sive, Sivette, Sivot, voyez Cive, etc …
4sive — ab·es·sive; abu·sive; ad·es·sive; ad·he·sive·me·ter; ad·he·sive·ness; ad·mis·sive; ad·ver·sive; ag·gres·sive·ness; Air·bra·sive; al·lu·sive; ap·pre·hen·sive; as·cen·sive; cen·sive; cic·a·tri·sive; co·he·sive; col·lu·sive; com·pas·sive;… …
5Sive — This interesting name is metonymic for a maker of Sieves, or as described in the Medieval Rolls a Syvewryct . It is of Old English pre 7th Century origins being derived from Sife meaning a sieve and Wrychta a wright or more plausibly in this case …
6sivè — si·vè s.m.inv. RE piem. preparazione simile al civet francese {{line}} {{/line}} DATA: 1965. ETIMO: dal sett. sivè, tratto dalla loc. fr. lièvre en civet lepre col sugo di cipolle . POLIREMATICHE: al sivè: loc.agg.inv. RE piem …
7sivé — Du Sivé, Suillum ius conditum, Ius e suillis intestinis. Du sivé ou oistres, Sorbitio, vel ius ex ostreorum decocto …
8şive — is., db., Far. şīve 1) Söyleyiş özelliği Bunu Arapça değil, peltek bir Kafkas şivesiyle, Türkçe söyledi. R. H. Karay 2) db. Ağız 3) esk. Naz, eda …
9sive — si̱ve, auch se̲u̲ [aus gleichbed. lat. sive bzw. seu]: Konjunktion mit der Bedeutung „oder“ …
10sive — si|ve vb., r, de, t, i sms. sive , fx sivedræn …