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sis
1[ sis ]
-sis
2- a suffix appearing in loanwords from Greek, where it was used to form from verbs abstract nouns of action, process, state, condition, etc.:
thesis; aphesis.
sis
1/ siːs; sɪs /
interjection
- informal.an exclamation of disgust
sis
2/ sɪs /
noun
- informal.short for sister
SIS
3abbreviation for
- Also calledMI6 (in Britain) Secret Intelligence Service
- (in New Zealand) Security Intelligence Service
Word History and Origins
Origin of sis2
Word History and Origins
Origin of sis1
Example Sentences
To everyone’s surprise, Domingo shows up at the wedding, singing to Matt, “Hey Matt. Came all this way. Had to explain. Direct from Domingo. Kelsey’s a friend. She’s like my sis but we did hook up though!”
“Praying for God to wrap his arms around you sis,” one post reshared by Williams said.
The early devotion to music, theater and his mother; the love of dancing and the fear he might be labeled a “sis”; the affair with Howe, his most effective publicist; and “the MGM training” that helped keep it out of the press: In ways even he may not have understood, Novarro’s queerness made him who he was — including, most prominently, a movie star.
A co-production of Seattle Public Theater and SIS Productions, “Unrivaled,” written by Rosie Narasaki and directed by Mimi Katano, will run May 10-June 2.
The first mainstage play from SIS Productions since the pandemic uses the rivalry between two of the world’s most legendary writers to examine how power systems divide the very people who have the most to gain from cooperation.
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