languor
مستى ،ضعف ،فتور،ماندگى ،پژمردگى
langueur
Etymology: Although languor may cause your tongue to hang out, it is not related to "language." Today's word goes back to Latin languere "be weak, faint," probably a nasalized (with an [n]) form of PIE *(s)leg- "slack." We recently saw a nasalized stem in Latin pungere "prick," found in "expunge," which also turns up in pugil "boxer" without the [n]. Some PIE words also appear with and without an initial [s], as in English "cold" and "scald," which share the same origin! So, without the [s] and with the [n], we get 'languor" and with the [s] less the [n] we get English "slack." Latin laxus "loose," whence our "lax" [lak-s], probably shares the same source with neither extra sound.kam-tavân-i( ye badan)
krex-i( ye jân yâ ravân)
kam-šur-i
languor
kelesuan
languor
(แลง'เกอะ) n. ความอ่อนเพลีย,ความอ่อนเปลี้ยเพลียแรง,ความเซื่องซึม,ความเชื่องช้า คำศัพท์ย่อย: languorous adj. ดูlanguor
languor
['lae¤gъ] n 1. отпуснатост, отмалялост, премалялост; притома, отмала; 2. безразличие, апатия, инертност; 3. замечтаност, унесеност; 4. потискащо затишие.