They looked and looked for her for a long, long time. “It was a long time she was away and when the teachers asked me, I told them she went to the toilet. “We were at the crèche and she wanted me to go with her,” but I told her I was busy, I was playing, I didn’t want to go and she went out by herself,” she said, at her home in a Cape Town slum. Now 12, Mbango tells the story with an intense, unflinching gaze but her hands, fidgeting nervously as she speaks, show the trauma is still raw. (Same with Czar in Russian.Cape Town’s Khayelitsha township is seen in this picture taken October 4, 2016. of scintillare "to sparkle," from scintilla "spark"" And Caesar is a name that has nothing to do with any of those, but did end up being used to mean "emperor." You can't say the word Caeser came from German, because it's much older, and the Germans actually got their word, "kaiser," from it. caedere "to cut" (see -cide)." Scintillate- "1620s, from L. of excidere "to cut out"), ultimately from L. *cisoria (pl.) "cutting instrument," from *cisus (in compounds such as L. sceadan "to divide, separate Scissors- "late 14c., sisoures, from O.Fr. of scire "to know," probably originally "to separate one thing from another, to distinguish," related to scindere "to cut, divide," from PIE base *skei- (cf. So you were right for the s**t/science one, but that's about it.
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