Anagrams & Information About | English word SAUT


SAUT

8

Number of letters

4

Is palindrome

No

5
AU
AUT
SA
SAU
UT

37

3

83

43
AS
AST
ASU
AT
ATS
ATU
AU
AUS
AUT
SA
SAT
SAU

Examples of Using SAUT in a Sentence

  • Later, she moved on to motorcycle stunts (La Moto Ailée, Saut dans la Lune), but after a bad crash in Berlin 1904 she had to spend eight months recovering her health.
  • The word 'somersault' is derived from Old Provençal sobresaut (via Middle French sombresault) meaning "jump over", from sobre, "over" (from Latin supra-, as in supranational); and saut, "jump" (from Latin saltus, the same root as salient).
  • About 3 km east of the confluence of these rivers, the Rhue has carved a small gorge at a site known as the "Saut de la Saule".
  • The dance features a range of steps from classical ballet pique turns and saut de basques to popular lindy hop and Charleston steps.
  • They include "The Alley Cat" (Le matou), "Juliette" (Juliette Pomerleau), "The Second Fiddle" (Le second violon), Charles the Bold (Charles le téméraire: Un temps du chien, Part 1), "The Years of Fire" (Charles le téméraire: Un temps du chien, Part 2), "A Very Bold Leap" (Un saut dans le vide), and "The Accidental Education of Jerome Lupien" (Les Empouchers).
  • Denise Desautels, Le saut de l'ange, autour de quelques objets de Martha Townsend, Montréal/Amay, Le Noroît /L'Arbre à paroles.
  • Vázquez had two daughters, including Fabiola Vázquez Saut, the former mayor of Acayucan, and Regina Vázquez Saut, a former federal congressperson.
  • Le Saut à la couverture (also known as Brimade dans une caserne) is an 1895 French short black-and-white silent documentary film directed and produced by Louis Lumière.
  • The GCP were founded in 1965 as Équipes de Saut Ouverture à Grande Hauteur, SOGH (High Altitude Jump Teams or HAHO Teams).
  • The easiest road to take for Badaun is the Pucca Road running between Mauza Meeran Sarai and Ghalib Patti, going up to river Saut.
  • Other examples include "Ye'll ne'er cast saut on his tail" (English: You'll never cast salt on his tail) is a Scottish proverb of unknown antiquity.



Search for SAUT in:






Page preparation took: 513.80 ms.