'Griff' is a slang word meaning reliable news.
By slave owners.
For most of the indigenous peoples of the Americas it has no meaning at all. The word probably derives from the Mohawk place-name kenhtà:ke, "[at] the meadow", although some people claim it is from a Shawnee word. It would therefore only have significance to the Mohawk (or possibly Shawnee) - and only as the name of a small location. It was white people who applied the name to the state of Kentucky, not the native tribes.
It means 'kisses'.
the main character is onesimus. hes a slave. i have to do a test about this book and was looking for a summary of the book hah <---- This was totally a student from Word In Seasons. Right?
Another word for slave is servant.
It's a Spanish word for 'Slave'
It means to start something.
Kikeh as derived for the word Kakeh that mean kitchen and the word Klik that means slave so it means Kitchen Slave.
'Griff' is a slang word meaning reliable news.
The word "slave" has one syllable.
Buck is a homograph because it has two meanings but identical spelling and pronunciation.
"The buck stops here." "He shot the seven point buck." "He asked to borrow a buck."
Could be Czech in origin. It means worker, or slave in that language.
The noun buck is a singular, common, concrete noun; a word for an adult male deer or rabbit; an informal word for a dollar. The word buck is also a verb: buck, bucks, bucking, bucked.
it means slave or servant.
Slave is usually translated as eved (pronounced EH-ved), written עבד, but the word eved doesn't exactly mean slave; it means servant.