Yahoo! Finally back to the suite. At least you got to bring her back to the "homestead" before venturing home! I wish I could be at the airport to see the welcoming. Talking to you each day helped in staying connected to this unbelievable process. JOANNE YOU ARE THE BEST! Love, Mar
FRIEND
A friend is a lover, literally. The relationship between Latin amīcus "friend" and amō "I love" is clear, as is the relationship between Greek philos "friend" and phileō "I love." In English, though, we have to go back a millennium before we see the verb related to friend. At that time, frēond, the Old English word for "friend," was simply the present participle of the verb frēon, "to love." The Germanic root behind this verb is *frī-, which meant "to like, love, be friendly to." Closely linked to these concepts is that of "peace," and in fact Germanic made a noun from this root, *frithu-, meaning exactly that.
Definition - brought to you by The New World Translation
FRIEND
Proverbs 18:24 "There exist companions disposed to break one another to pieces, but there exists a friend sticking closer than a brother."
1 comment:
Yahoo! Finally back to the suite. At least you got to bring her back to the "homestead" before venturing home! I wish I could be at the airport to see the welcoming. Talking to you each day helped in staying connected to this unbelievable process. JOANNE YOU ARE THE BEST! Love, Mar
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