ambulant
گردنده ،سيار،متحرک
ambulant
came from Latin ambulans, ambulant-, the present participle of ambulare "to walk." The same word gave us "amble" via the French variant, ambler "to walk," not to mention "alley," borrowed from French "allée," past participle of aller "to go." The root probably descended from Proto-Into-European *ambhi "around," originally "from both sides," the mother of Greek amphi "around, on both sides" seen in our borrowing "amphitheater."dowre-gard (pbp.)
tond-row
+
=> vendeur ambulant
ambulant
['aembjulъnt] а амбулаторен (за болен, лечение).
ambulant
(ec) ambulant
ambulánt
adj. m., pl. ambulánţi; f. sg. ambulántă, pl. ambulánte
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