"Fossatum" is a word in LAW AND LEGAL
A dyke, ditch, or trench; a place inclosed by a ditch; a moat; a canal
Sydney, don't leave Adrian because of me.""It's more complicated than that," I said automatically."It's really not," she said. "From everything I've seen and heard, you're just afraid. You've always controlled every detail of your life. When you couldn't-like with the Alchemists-you found a way to seize back that control.""There is nothing wrong with wanting control," I snapped."Except that we can't always have it, and sometimes that is a good thing. A great thing, even," she added. "And that's how it is with Adrian. No matter how hard you try, you aren't going to be able to control your feelings for him. You can't help loving him, and so you're running away. I'm just an excuse.
WORD SUGGESTIONS
When young Jose, newly arrived in the United States, made his first trip to Yankee Stadium, there were no tickets left for sale. Touched by his disappointment, a friendly ticket salesman found him a perch near the American flag. Later, Jose wrote home enthusiastically about his experience. "And the Americans, they are so friendly!" he concluded. "Before the game started, they all stood up and looked at me and sang, .... 'Jose, can you see?'"
In Mexican law. A ditch, channel, or canal, through whlch water, diverted from its natural course, is conducted, for use …
Read the complete definitionA canal, ditch, or water-course running through marshy grounds. A mark or gauge placed ln or on the banks of …
Read the complete definitionIn old English law. To let or demise at a fixed rent. Particularly used with reference to the public domain …
Read the complete definitionA letting or renting, esp. a license to inclose land in a forest with a low hedge and a ditch, …
Read the complete definitionChange of a non-sibilant letter to a sibilant, as of -tion to -shun, duke to ditch.
Read the complete definitionbanál - To lift up and fling down, to take or raise up and throw to the ground, to take …
Read the complete definitionA tower or advanced work defending the entrance to a castle or city, as at a gate or bridge. It …
Read the complete definitionA wall built across the ditch of a fortification, with a sluice gate to regulate the height of water in …
Read the complete definitionA narrow shelf or path between the bottom of a parapet and the ditch.
Read the complete definitionIn old English law. A fine lmposed for not repairing banks, ditches, and causeways
Read the complete definitionHaving such a state or condition as a thing would have to a person who is blind; not well marked …
Read the complete definitionBy boundary is under-stood, in general, every separatlon, natural or artificial, whlch marks the confines or line of division of …
Read the complete definitionA structure erected over a river, creek, stream, ditch, ravine, or other place, to facilitate the passage thereof; in-cluding by …
Read the complete definitionAn artificial ditch or trench in the earth, for confining water to a defined channel, to be used for purposes …
Read the complete definitionA work made across or in the ditch, to protect it from the enemy, or to serve as a covered …
Read the complete definitionA ditch or drain along the side of a hill to catch the surface water; also, a ditch at the …
Read the complete definitionA ditch or drain for catching water. See Catchdrain.
Read the complete definitionThe exterior slope or wall of the ditch; -- sometimes, the whole covered way, beyond the ditch, with its parapet …
Read the complete definitionA drain trench, in a ditch or moat; -- called also cuvette.
Read the complete definitiondán-ok - To shove, push, thrust, throw. Idán-ok siá sa kalóg. Push him into the ditch. (cf. balún-ok, tulúd, tíklod, …
Read the complete definition