caro in English

noun

family name; Joseph ben Ephraim Caro (1488-1575), 16th century Jewish religious rabbinical authority and compiler of the Shulhan Aruch (Jewish code of laws)

Use "caro" in a sentence

Below are sample sentences containing the word "caro" from the English Dictionary. We can refer to these sentence patterns for sentences in case of finding sample sentences with the word "caro", or refer to the context using the word "caro" in the English Dictionary.

1. Brentwood « Back To Caro, MI

2. View the online menu of Brentwood and other restaurants in Caro, Michigan

3. 2011 – Stefano De Caro, an Italian archaeologist, is elected Director-General of ICCROM.

4. [French Caresse, from Italian carezza, from caro, dear, from Latin cārus; see kā- in

5. Enzesfeld Caro Metallwerke AG is one of Europe’s leading producers of cages for roller bearings.

6. Arraffare i brandelli di una nobiltà dissoluta (e se Massa lo teme, Caro lo Blandisce, Latino gli prostituisce pavido Timele)

7. Catch- Strangers By Night 1986 Zaczyna się w biurze, gdzie Caro wpada w oko jeden z kolegów z pracy

8. The more apt, and useful, comparison might be with Robert Caro, the biographer of Robert Moses and Lyndon Johnson, the great Anatomizer of political power

9. He also expanded the grounds of the house by purchasing adjacent properties and placed in them the work of sculptors including Anthony Caro and Richard Serra.

10. A witchlike old woman Word Origin for Crone C14: from Old Northern French carogne carrion, ultimately from Latin caro flesh Collins English Dictionary - Complete & Unabridged 2012 Digital Edition © …

11. The Caruncle (from Latin caro =flesh) is a soft, pink, ovoid body, about 5 mm high and 3 mm broad, situated in the lacus lacrimalis medial to the plica semilunaris

12. 2.2-2 Applicability of CARO, 2020 to audit of branches of a company It may be noted that according to section 2(14), the term “branch office” means any establishment described as such by the company

13. ‘The ant stopped to examine the gorse seeds, it quickly found the bright orange Caruncle and immediately began to bite and gnaw it.’ Origin Late 16th century obsolete French, from Latin caruncula, from caro, carn- ‘flesh’.

14. Apoplectical affettuoso disturbance verbum caro factum est drganie sodium hydroxide أمين مكتبة doskora puma gluhonijem courtoisie slijediti koga izbliza virkningsgrad latura scratch (adj.) hidden character Ihr(e) inotropic articular, hablar distintamente confirming Brei apihin weak ingetogen butcher, fig

15. Britholite and Beckelite (Morozewicz, l90s and winther, 1901), as well as abukumalite (Hata, 1938) to apatite, calcium phosphate Caro(pOr)o (OH)r, hexagonal P6s/m with the general formula (Na, Ca, Th, Lnr16 (Si, P)6Oz4(OH)2, was first pointed

16. Charnel (adj.) "common repository for deads bodies," late 14c., from Old French Charnel (12c.) "fleshly," from Late Latin carnale "graveyard," properly neuter of adjective carnalis, from Latin carnis "of the flesh," genitive of caro "flesh, meat," "flesh," originally "a piece of flesh," from PIE root *sker-(1) "to cut." As an adjective from 1813

17. 1400, "physical, human, mortal," from Old French Carnal and directly from Latin Carnalis "fleshly, of the flesh," from carnis "of the flesh," genitive of caro "flesh, meat," "flesh," originally "a piece of flesh," from PIE root *sker-(1) "to cut." Meaning "sensual, pertaining to the passions and appetites of the flesh" is from early 15c.; that of "worldly, sinful, not spiritual" is