To kiss : v.tr. (word coming from- and from arm).
The verb “kiss” has several meanings:
1. Take et tighten between his arm (to embrace, to embrace, to embrace), specially for mark are love or his affection and accompanying ce geste de kisses.
He kissed her tenderly, with outpouring (Kiss).
– Quote from the French writer, novelist, playwright, novelist, diarist and letter writer Roger Martin du Gard (1881-1958): “She had hugged him with both arms, kissing him, suffocating him”.
I kiss you fondly, with all my the heart..., final formulas of a letter addressed to a dear person.
Proverb: Who kisses too much little- hugged: who wants too much undertake risk to do nothing succeed.
Poetry: Quote from Fénelon (*): “I will throw myself at his feet, I will kiss his knees”.
(*) François de Salignac de La Mothe-Fénelon, commonly known as Fénelon, nicknamed “the Swan of Cambrai”, is a French man of the Church, theologian, teacher and writer, born August 6, 1651 at the Château de Fénelon in Sainte-Fénelon. Mondane (Quercy, today Dordogne) and died on January 7, 1715 in Cambrai.
2. By extension: Give un kiss, kisses to someone) (kiss).
– Quote from the French writer Pierre Loti (1850-1923): “Kissing you full on the mouth, with his big lips”.
Kiss someone on both play.
Kiss someone like good pain.
Kiss with the language (colloquial): to gallop.
Pronominal verb: They kissed on the appetizer (to kiss).
3. Figurative and literary meaning: Adopt (a opinion, parts) (to choose, marry).
Kiss her career also…
– Quote from French writer Pierre Loti (1850-1923): “Do you also intend to embrace Islamism? ".
Kiss theinterest, parts, to the defense of someone, there to attach with ardor, make it your own, defend.
4. By analogy: Grab by view in all its expanse.
Kiss her scene du Regard.
– Quote from the French writer Émile Zola (1840-1902): “From there, he took in the whole country at a glance.”
Figuratively : apprehend by thought (understand, design).
– Quote from the French writer Pierre Loti (1850-1923): “If thought embraces the infinite simultaneity of facts”.
– Quote from the French writer Anatole France (1844-1824): “The affairs of a State are of an extent that the mind of a man cannot embrace”.
Contain, encompass (understand).
– Quote from the French writer, philologist, philosopher, epigraphist and historian Ernest Renan (1823-1892): “A history should embrace the entire dark period […]”.