pango

Etymology
From, from. Cognates include 🇨🇬.

Verb

 * 1) to fasten, fix, set, especially drive, sink, force in
 * 2)  to set, plant
 * 3)  to  children
 * 4)  to compose, make heard or give out
 * 5)  in verse
 * 6) * 37 , Martial, Epigrammata 3.38.7–8
 * Sī nihil hinc veniet, pangentur carmina nōbīs:    audieris, dīcēs esse Marōnis opus.
 * If nothing will come out of that, poems shall be composed by us:    should you hear, you'd say it's Maro's work.
 * 1)  in prose
 * 2) * 68 – 44 , Cicero, Epistulae ad Atticum 2.6.2:
 * Itaque ἀνέκδοτα ā nōbīs, quae tibi ūnī legāmus, Theopompiō genere aut etiam asperiōre multō pangentur.
 * Therefore anecdotes, which I shall only read to you, will be composed by me, in Theopompian style or even more savage.
 * 1) in song
 * 2) * c. 310 – c. 395 , Ausonius, Commemorātiō professōrum Burdigalēnsium 10.42–45:
 * Pange et Anastasiō flēbile, Mūsa, melum et memorā tenuem nēnia, grammaticum.
 * Sing to Anastasius too a flowing melody, Muse, and remember the delicate grammaticus, O dirge.
 * 1)  to celebrate, tell of, record, compose accounts of
 * 2) * a. 405 , Prudentius, Liber Cathēmerinōn 9.7:
 * Facta nōs et iam probāta pangimus mīrācula.
 * We tell of miracles done and already proven.
 * 1) * 1225 – 1274 , Thomas Aquinas, Pange lingua 1–6:
 * "la"
 * Sing to Anastasius too a flowing melody, Muse, and remember the delicate grammaticus, O dirge.
 * 1)  to celebrate, tell of, record, compose accounts of
 * 2) * a. 405 , Prudentius, Liber Cathēmerinōn 9.7:
 * Facta nōs et iam probāta pangimus mīrācula.
 * We tell of miracles done and already proven.
 * 1) * 1225 – 1274 , Thomas Aquinas, Pange lingua 1–6:
 * "la"

- Pange, lingua, glōriōsī corporis mystērium, sanguinisque prētiōsī, quem in mundī pretium frūctus ventris generōsī rēx effūdit gentium.


 * 1)  to fix, determine
 * 2) to agree upon, settle
 * 3) * c. 190 – 185 , Plautus, Bacchides 4.8.38:
 * Dūcentīs Philippīs rem pepigī.
 * I've settled the matter for two hundred Philippics.
 * 1) * c. 69 – p. 122 , Suetonius, Dē rhētoribus 1.9:
 * Aestīvō tempore adulēscentēs urbānī cum Ōstiam vēnissent, lītus ingressī, piscātōrēs trahentēs rēte adiērunt et pepigērunt, bolum quantī ēmerent.
 * When youths from the city came to Ostia in the summer, having went on the beach, they approached the net-drawing fishermen and agreed on what they should pay for the haul.
 * 1)  to settle a price or monetary value
 * 2) to make an agreement, pledge
 * 3) * c. 330 , Juvencus, Evangeliorum libri 4.513–516:
 * Pars strīctīs gladiīs pars fīdēns pondere clāvae sīgna sequēbātur Iūdae prōmissa furentis. Ōscula nam pepigit sēsē contingere Chrīstī, quō facile ignōtum caperet miserābile vulgus.
 * One part with drawn swords, another confident in the weight of the cudgel was following the promised signs of thievish Judas. For he agreed to give Christ a kiss, so that the pitiable masses could easily capture the unknown one.
 * 1) * 4th C. , Saint Jerome, Vulgate, Genesis 15:18:
 * "la"
 * 1) * c. 330 , Juvencus, Evangeliorum libri 4.513–516:
 * Pars strīctīs gladiīs pars fīdēns pondere clāvae sīgna sequēbātur Iūdae prōmissa furentis. Ōscula nam pepigit sēsē contingere Chrīstī, quō facile ignōtum caperet miserābile vulgus.
 * One part with drawn swords, another confident in the weight of the cudgel was following the promised signs of thievish Judas. For he agreed to give Christ a kiss, so that the pitiable masses could easily capture the unknown one.
 * 1) * 4th C. , Saint Jerome, Vulgate, Genesis 15:18:
 * "la"
 * One part with drawn swords, another confident in the weight of the cudgel was following the promised signs of thievish Judas. For he agreed to give Christ a kiss, so that the pitiable masses could easily capture the unknown one.
 * 1) * 4th C. , Saint Jerome, Vulgate, Genesis 15:18:
 * "la"

- In illō diē pepigit Dominus foedus cum Ābram, dīcēns: “Sēminī tuō dabō terram hanc ā fluviō Aegyptī ūsque ad fluvium magnum Euphrāten ”


 * 1)  to promise, pledge, arrange, undertake to perform
 * 2)  to betroth, promise in wedlock
 * 1)  to betroth, promise in wedlock
 * 1)  to betroth, promise in wedlock
 * 1)  to betroth, promise in wedlock

Usage notes
The third principal part is very rare; outside a few textually uncertain attestations, the above quotation from Columella is the only place it is found. The perfect might belong to the archaic form / instead.

Etymology
Cognate with 🇨🇬.

Noun

 * 1) black (colour/color)

Noun

 * 1) cave

Etymology 2
From.

Noun

 * 1) rent

Adjective

 * 1) snub-nosed

Etymology
From Proto-Western Oceanic *paŋo.

Verb

 * 1) to hunt