
A young person who out of respect volunteers to work for someone from time to time.Įtymology 2 Pronunciation īar̃ā̀ f ( plural bàr̃ā̀ce-bàr̃ā̀ce, possessed form bar̃àr̃)Įtymology 3 Pronunciation.( Standard Kano Hausa ) IPA ( key): īarā̀ m ( feminine baranyā̀, plural barōrī, possessed form baràn).( Ivory Coast slang ) to work, to labour.My science for the children is: to do some plain talk with them, discover their troubles, their concerns, to make provisions for those who want to go to school, or to have some real work in relation to a general sustenance, to render some good help in relation to their problems and give them a new chance, and to apply my power for their dreams. Ma science pour les gopios, c’est de : couman fah-fah avec eux, prendre dra de leur melanhement, de leur miria, djaouli ceux qui veulent fraya au souklou, ou avoir un bara djidji par rapport à un graya général demso, decrou un bon soutrali par rapport à les bognan et leur gué un nouveau douahou et mettre mon fangan au-devant pour leurs wés. a yard a unit of length equal to 3 feetīara ( third person singular past indicative baraði, third person plural past indicative baraðu, supine barað)Ĭonjugation Conjugation of bara (group v-30)ġOnly the past participle being declined.^ Orel, Vladimir (1998), “ bara”, in Albanian Etymological Dictionary, Leiden, Boston, Cologne: Brill, →ISBN, page 17.Mohamed Hassan Kamil (2015) L’afar: description grammaticale d’une langue couchitique (Djibouti, Erythrée et Ethiopie), Paris: Université Sorbonne Paris Cité (doctoral thesis)įrom Proto-Celtic *bargos, *barginā ( “ cake, bread ” ) (compare Welsh bara, Old Cornish bara, Old Irish bairgen f ( “ bread, loaf food, plain diet ” )), from Proto-Indo-European *bʰars- ( “ spike, prickle ” ) ( Old Norse barr ( “ corn, grain, barley ” ), Latin far ( “ spelt ” ), Serbo-Croatian бра̏шно/ brȁšno).Hayward (1985) An Afar-English-French dictionary (with Grammatical Notes in English), University of London, →ISBN, page 68 See the etymology of the corresponding lemma form. Abar, Abra, Arab, Baar, Raab, abra, arbaĪfar Etymology 1 Pronunciation.Whereas bara typically emphasizes masculine homoeroticism and frank explicit sexual situations, yaoi typically emphasizes the androgynous bishonen aesthetic and depicts emotional romantic relationships. The term bara often contrasts with yaoi, which is gay male media usually made by heterosexual women to appeal to other heterosexual women.The term barazoku was once relatively more common in the Japanese gay community (the magazine Barazoku starting publication in 1971), but has long since gone out of fashion in Japan, having been replaced by terms like ガチムチ ( gachimuchi ).( Internet slang ) Any homoerotic media or pornography that accentuates macho masculinity gay porn.( Internet slang ) Gay male media of a similar style and aesthetic, regardless of the creator's gender or ethnicity.( Internet slang ) A genre of homoerotic media, usually manga and often pornographic, made by gay men for gay men in Japan.Short for barazoku, from Japanese 薔薇族 ( barazoku, literally “ rose tribe ” ), the name of Japan's first modern gay men's magazine, named after a post-World War II term for gay men.
