A closer look at Caleb Porter # 39; Penalty requests for Portland Timbers | instant Replay
Cole 1893 1964, American composer and lyricist of musicals His most popular songs include night and day and let's do it.
George, Baron Porter Luddenham 1920 2002, the British chemist who shared the Nobel Prize in Chemistry in 1967 for his work on photolysis.
Katherine Anne 1890 1980, US novelist and short story His best-known collections of stories popping Judas 1930 and Pale Horse, Pale Rider, 1939.
Rodney Robert 1917 85 British biochemist shared the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine in 1972 for determining the structure of an antibody.
Collins English Dictionary - Complete 12c rapporteur of the end of portator door portatorem Latin nominative, which carries the rod participates past portare to lead Latin see the port No. 1.
Doorkeeper, janitors, mid-end 13c 12c as a surname, of Anglo-French portour former French gatekeeper 12c Porter, from late Latin portarius gatekeeper to the Latin door see the port porta n 2.
Type Stout, 1734 short for beer to bring 1721 to wear No. 1, because beer was made to or preferred by porters and other workers, being cheap and strong.
Doorkeeper, janitors, mid-end 13c 12c as a surname, of Anglo-French portour former French gatekeeper 12c Porter, from late Latin portarius gatekeeper to the Latin door see the port porta n 2.
Type Stout, 1734 short for beer to bring 1721 to wear No. 1, because beer was made to or preferred by porters and other workers, being cheap and strong.
Harbor, Old English Harbor port, haven, reinforced by old port French port, the port; move mountains; Old English and Old French words to both the port Latin Portus, the port, the source input, passage, figuratively place of refuge assylum, CIP prtu- a go, a passage of the root per- 2 lead, pass over cf. Sanskrit parayati carries over; Greek poros travel, passage, path, peirein to drill, run through; Latin Door door, door, passing portare, peritus experienced; passing Avestan, ford, bridge; Armenian hordan move forward; Ford Welsh Rhyd; Slavonic Pariti to fly; Old English faran go, travel, old Norse entry fjörðr estuary.
Meaning left side of a ship looking forward stern is attested from the 1540s, the notion of side opposite the port where a ship is moored portside It replaced in common usage to avoid confusion with starboard ; officially by order of the Admiralty 1844 and U S Department of the Navy from 1846 opinion place of refuge figuratively 15c is attested from the beginning; sentence a port in a storm first recorded in 1749 a port of call in 1810 is visited under a ship.
Gateway, Old English portal port, door, door, entrance, old door French door entry, the door of the Latin city Porta door; door entry, per- root PIE view port n 1 specific sense window open in the side of a ship is attested from 1300 c.
Having, Mien c 1300, the old French port to carry to carry, Latin Portare see the port No. 1.
Type soft dark red wine, 1690, shortcut Oporto northwest Portugal from which the wine was originally shipped to England; Porto from O port; see the port No. 1.
To carry, wear French way of Latin portare to transport view port n 1 Related Ported; portage.
Set Porter Porter, Porter, Latin porta door, wear short 1734.