From Old Norse ver, from Proto-Germanic *wīz, from Proto-Indo-European *wéy, plural of *éǵh₂. VI (unstressed accusative and reflexive form) The problem was that he alienated Pope Pius VI and Pius VII – the latter whom he effectively arrested. From Proto-Celtic *āuyom (cf. Welsh wy, Cornish oy), from Proto-Indo-European *h₂ōwyóm (“egg”). The idea is completely different from that of the two gates in Virgil, n. vi. You had to deal with the ugly side of the media early in your career when you played King Henry VI on stage in London. De voi (“you”). Compare Italian vi and Romanian vi. Pope Paul VI and the Church of that time could be forgiven for Puritan idealism. From Old Norse vé, from Proto-Germanic *wīhą, from Proto-Indo-European *weyk- (“to choose, separate, set aside as holy, consecrate, sacrifice”).
Related to the Latin victima (“victim, victim”). six, 6, VI, sixer, sise, Captain Hicks, half a dozen, sextet, sestet, sextlet, hexadnoun stylistically elevated variant of ci, used only in formal contexts. Translated from the Latin vīdī. Related to Galician and Spanish wine vi. vi is a screen-oriented text editor originally developed for the Unix operating system. The portable subset of vi behavior and programs based on it, and the ex-publisher language supported in those programs, are described by the Single Unix and POSIX specification. The original vi code was written by Bill Joy in 1976, as a visual mode for a line editor called ex, which Joy had written with Chuck Haley. Bill Joys ex 1.1 was released as part of the first version of BSD Unix in March 1978. It wasn`t until ex version 2.0, which was released as part of the second Berkeley software distribution in May 1979, that the publisher was installed under the name vi and the name it is known by today. Some recent implementations of vi may trace their source code ancestry back to Bill Joy; others are completely new and widely compatible reimplementations.
The name vi is derived from the shortest single abbreviation for visual control in ex; The command in question switches the EX line editor to visual mode. The name vi is pronounced, or. In addition to various nonfree software implementations of vi distributed with proprietary unix implementations, there are several free and open source software implementations of vi. A 2009 survey of Linux Journal readers found that vi was the most used text editor by respondents, surpassing gedit, the second most used editor, by almost a factor of two. And Pope Alexander VI asked the painter Pinturicchio to dress his lover as the Virgin Mary in a fresco. This word is used when vă (dativ) is combined with the following accusatives: Borrowed from Italian voi, French you and/or Russian вы (vy), plus the i of personal pronouns. vi (nominative in the first person plural, accusative bone, genitive vores, c vor, n vort, pl vore) Cf. le ni correspondent for noi. Compare the Romanian vă. Compare also Italian vi A diminutive of the female names Violet and Viola. From Old Catalan vi~vin, from Latin vīnum, from Proto-Italic *wīnom, from Proto-Indo-European *wóyh₁nom.
From the Latin ibi (“there; then”), from the proto-italic *iðei or *ifei with Jbian shortening, from the proto-Indo-European pronominal tribe *éy. [from `Visual Interface`] A screen editor assembled by Bill Joy for a first version of BSD. Became the de facto standard Unix publisher and an almost undisputed hacker favorite outside of MIT until the rise of EMACS after about 1984. Tends to frustrate new users endlessly, as it does not accept commands while waiting for input text, or vice versa, and the default configuration on older versions gives no indication of how the editor is in (years ago, a correspondent reported, that he often heard that the publisher`s name is pronounced /vi: l/; there is now a clone vi called vile). Still, vi (and variants like vim and elvis) is still widely used (about half of respondents in a 1991 Usenet survey preferred it), and even EMACS fans often use it as a mail editor and for small editing jobs (mainly because it launches faster than larger versions of EMACS). See Holy Wars. The VIadjective King George VI, which referred to a quantity consisting of six items or units from the United States Virgin Islands, the U.S. Virgin Islands, asked him to think about what blow it would be for England if Belfast was hit by a random bomb. Becomes too ve when a third person follows the direct object in a celetic way (lo, la, li, le or ne). But this small building had been meeting the needs of the place since the time of Edward VI. (This etymology is missing or incomplete. Please add it or discuss it in the etymology scriptorium.) In the dance of scene VI, she used a long black gauze scarf and a white scarf.
From Old Swedish hvi, Old Norse hví, Proto-Germanic *hwī (“by what, how”), Proto-Indo-European *kwey, locative of *kwis (“who”). Related to Old Danish hvi, Danish hvi, Old West Norse hví, Norwegian Nynorsk kvi, Norwegian Bokmål hvi, Old Saxon hwi, hwiu, Old High German hwiu, Middle High German wiu, German like (“like”), Old English hwȳ, hvī, Middle English why, English why, further from Latin quī (“what, who, who”). more than 130 southeastern Virgin Islands; A territory dependent on the United States the cardinal number, which is the sum of five and a single platelet lying on a red blood cell, can easily be confused with a malaria parasite (plaque VI). These early documents were confirmed by several later kings, Henry VI.