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KHANDBAHALE.COM is a digital dictionary platform forĢ2 Official Languages of India with an extensive vocabulary of 10+ million words, meanings and definitions.Īssamese অসমীয়া Bengali বাংলা Bodo बड़ो Dogri डोगरी English Gujarati ગુજરાતી Hindi हिन्दी Kannada ಕನ್ನಡ Kashmiri कॉशुर Konkani कोंकणी Maithili মৈথিলী Malayalam മലയാളം Manipuri মৈতৈলোন্ Marathi मराठी Nepali नेपाली Oriya ଓଡ଼ିଆ Punjabi ਪੰਜਾਬੀ Sanskrit संस्कृतम् Santali Sindhi سنڌي Tamil தமிழ் Telugu తెలుగు Urdu اُردُو. You can enter a word by copy & post, drag & drop, or by typing in the search box above to get the meanings of ramp. This page is an online lexical resource, contains a list of the ramp like words in a Kannada language in the order of the alphabet, and that tells you what they mean, in the same or other languages including English. Official Languages of India Dictionary Translation is significantly better than Google translation offers multiple meanings, alternate words list of ramp ramp phrases with similar meanings in Kannada | ಕನ್ನಡ, Kannada | ಕನ್ನಡ dictionary Kannada | ಕನ್ನಡ ramp translation ramp meaning ramp definition ramp antonym ramp synonym Kannada language reference work for finding synonyms, antonyms of ramp. Ramp in Kannada Kannada of translation of ramp Kannada meaning of ramp what is ramp in Kannada dictionary? definition, antonym, and synonym of ramp Hypothetically akin to this verb is a noun *hrampa- meaning "hook, claw," whence Italian rampa "claw, talon," alongside Spanish, Catalan rampa "cramp, spasm." Suggested Indo-European comparisons (Lithuanian kremblỹs "chantarelle," Greek krámbos "clear, dry ") are even more tenuous.Ramp | Kannada dictionary translates English to Kannada and Kannada to English ramp words ramp phrases with ramp synonyms ramp antonyms ramp pronunciations. Though the Germanic origin of ramper is generally accepted (as by Französisches etymologisches Wörterbuch, Trésor de la langue française), the semantic connections are tenuous. Middle English rampen, raumpen "to creep on the ground (of a snake or dragon), to spring up, rear up on the hind legs (of a lion or other large carnivore)," borrowed from Anglo-French ramper "to climb, rear up on the hind legs, creep" (also continental Old French), perhaps going back to a Germanic base *hramp- used in various expressive words, as Middle Dutch ramp "mishap, disaster," rampe "torticollis in birds," Middle Low German ramp "spasm, epilepsy, distress, disaster," Old English gehrumpen "wrinkled, coiled, contracted," Old High German rimpfan, preterit rampf "to shrivel, shrink"
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The word is found only within European Indo-European, and regarded by some as a Wanderwort or borrowing from a substratal language. The fluctuation between palatovelar and plain velar in Balto-Slavic has been explained as a result of an original *ḱrem-, with loss of palatal quality before r. While Balto-Slavic has *ḱerm-, the other languages appear to have *ḱrVm- (or *ḱr̥m-?). In part verbal derivative of ramp entry 4, implying upward or downward movement on a ramp, in part derivative of ramp "artificial stimulation of a situation, market, etc., for financial or political gain," probably derivative of 19th-century British slang ramp "to rob, swindle," of uncertain originīack-formation from ramps, alteration (by intrusive p) of rams "the wild garlic Allium ursinum," going back to Middle English ramese, rampses, ramzys, going back to Old English hramsa, hramse (masculine or feminine weak noun), going back to Germanic *hramusan- or *hramusjōn- (whence also Old Saxon ramusia "wild garlic," Middle Low German ramese, remese, regional German Rams) going back to dialectal Indo-European *ḱrom-us-, ablaut variant of a noun seen also in Middle Irish crem, crim "wild garlic," Welsh craf, cra (< Celtic *kremo-, kramo-?), Russian čeremšá, Bosnian-Croatian-Serbian srȉjemuš, srȉjemuša, also crȉjemuš, crȉjemuša, Lithuanian kermùšė, kermušė͂, beside šermùkšnis, šermùkšlė "mountain ash" (< *kerm-(o)us-i̯eh 2, *ḱerm-(o)us-i̯eh 2), Greek krómmyon, krémyon (Hesychius) "onion ( Allium cepa) (< *ḱrom-us-o-/*ḱrem-us-o-)
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Borrowed from French rampe, going back to Middle French, "inclined plane on which the steps of a staircase are built," noun derivative of ramper "to crawl, creep, move slowly along a surface," going back to Old French - more at ramp entry 4