stammerer in Vietnamese

@stammerer /'stæmərə/
* danh từ
- người nói lắp

Sentence patterns related to "stammerer"

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

1. If there wasn't a stammerer, you are at the funeral now.

Nếu như không phải do người đó, thì cậu đã bị đốt cháy thành than rồi.

2. Psellos ('the stammerer') probably was a personal by-name referring to a speech defect.

Psellos ('người nói cà lăm') có thể là một cái biệt danh đề cập đến khiếm khuyết về khả năng ăn nói.

3. Appellation, although sometimes put for name simply, denotes, more properly, a descriptive term (called also Agnomen or cognomen), used by way of marking some individual peculiarity or characteristic; as, Charles the Bold, Philip the Stammerer

4. Adelaide of Paris was born between 855 and 860.1 She was the daughter of Bègue II Count of Paris.1 Between 868 and 870 Adelaide married Louis II "the Stammerer" Holy Roman Emperor, son of Charles II "the Bald" King of France and Ermentrude of Orléans.2,1 Adelaide of Paris died after 10 November 901.2,1

5. From Old French begart, originally a member of the Beghards, a lay brotherhood of mendicants in the Low Countries, from Middle Dutch beggaert "mendicant," with pejorative suffix; the order is said to be named after the Liege priest Lambert le Bègue (French for "Lambert the Stammerer"); others claim it's from Middle English beggere or Beggare, from

6. From Old French begart, originally a member of the Beghards, a lay brotherhood of mendicants in the Low Countries, from Middle Dutch beggaert "mendicant," with pejorative suffix; the order is said to be named after the Liege priest Lambert le Bègue (French for "Lambert the Stammerer"); others claim it's from Middle English beggere or Beggare, from

7. Beguine (n.) late 15c., from French béguine (13c.), Medieval Latin beguina, "a member of a women's spiritual order professing poverty and self-denial, founded c.1180 in Liege in the Low Countries."They are said to take their name from the surname of Lambert le Bègue "Lambert the Stammerer," a Liege priest who was instrumental in their founding, and it's likely the word was pejorative at first.