Asunder<span> is an adverb that </span>means<span> “into separate pieces.” So if you've torn your ex's love letter </span>asunder, you've forcefully ripped it into separate pieces — and rightly so.Asunder<span> comes from the Old English phrase on sundran, which </span>means<span> “into separate places.”</span>
Answer:
displayed about that flower-pot, on his return to
London, would have made any one sorry for him. I had
my own work to look after, and really could not be
tending his chrysanthemum2 all day.
Explanation:
Suffixes starting with N or O meanings <span> etymologies and examples: -Nema to -ous</span>
TBH I don't know what this question is ment for