jurer
from Late Latin coniurare "to pray by something holy," from the same Latin word meaning "to swear together" based on com- "with, together" + iurare "to swear" (in Latin [j] = [i]). "Iuare" comes from Proto-Indo-European was *deik-, or *yewes) "law, right," which we find in Latin ius, iuris "right, duty, obligation" and iurare "to swear." The English words "just," "jury," "jurisprudence," "perjury," and "juridical" all come from this Latin stem. "Injury" is the English version of Latin iniuria "a wrong, injustice," based on in- "not" + ius, iur- "law, right."sowgand xordan
jurer
1. vt and içmək 2. vi söyüş söymək