omittere
61pretermettre — Pretermettre, ou Omettre, Praetermittere, Omittere …
62prouffit — Prouffit, m. acut. (On devroit escrire Profict, par ce qu il vient de Profectus, nom verbal de Proficio) est gaing, augmentation, utilité, avancement, progrez, Vtilitas, Emolumentum, Quaestus, Lucrum, comme, Je ne fay pas mon profit de cela,… …
63omitir — (Del lat. omittĕre). 1. tr. Abstenerse de hacer algo. 2. Pasar en silencio algo. U. t. c. prnl.) …
64Bettler — 1. Am Tag ein Bettler, zu Nachts ein Dieb. – Sailer, 199; Simrock, 1032. 2. An ringen Bedler, thiar egh ian dör amgungkân. (Nordfries.) – Firmenich, III, 5, 65. Ein schlechter Bettler, der nicht eine Thür umgehen, meiden kann. 3. Au der mis… …
65omissible — omit ► VERB (omitted, omitting) 1) leave out or exclude. 2) fail to do. DERIVATIVES omissible adjective. ORIGIN Latin omittere let go …
66omit — ► VERB (omitted, omitting) 1) leave out or exclude. 2) fail to do. DERIVATIVES omissible adjective. ORIGIN Latin omittere let go …
67omissive — [ō mis′iv] adj. [< L omissus, pp. of omittere + IVE] failing to do or include; omitting omissively adv …
68omit — [ō mit′] vt. omitted, omitting [ME omitten < L omittere < ob (see OB ) + mittere, to send: see MISSION] 1. to fail to include; leave out 2. to fail to do; neglect 3. Obs. a) to take no not …
69omit — v.tr. (omitted, omitting) 1 leave out; not insert or include. 2 leave undone. 3 (foll. by verbal noun or to + infin.) fail or neglect (omitted saying anything; omitted to say). Derivatives: omissible adj. Etymology: ME f. L omittere omiss (as OB …
70ob- — prefix (also oc before c, of before f, op before p) occurring mainly in words of Latin origin, meaning: 1 exposure, openness (object; obverse). 2 meeting or facing (occasion; obvious). 3 direction (oblong; offer). 4 opposition, hostility, or… …