From Wiktionary, the free dictionary
Archived revision by WingerBot (talk | contribs) as of 23:09, 4 September 2024.
Jump to navigation Jump to search

Bourguignon

Etymology

From Latin pavor.

Noun

 m (plural pôs)

  1. fear

Labu

Noun

  1. water

References

  • Susanne Holzknecht, The Markham languages of Papua New Guinea (1989), page 71

Portuguese

Pronunciation

  • Rhymes: -o

Etymology 1

Verb

  1. Apocopic form of pôr; used preceding the pronouns lo, la, los or las
  2. Eye dialect spelling of pôr, representing Caipira Portuguese.

Etymology 2

Reduction of porra (damn!).

Interjection

  1. (Brazil, vulgar) It expresses astonishment, annoyance, boredom
    , que difícil!
    Damn, how difficult!
    Isso é legal, .
    Damn, this is cool.
Usage notes

In Brazil, is only very slightly less offensive than porra itself

Sicilian

Preposition

  1. Contraction of pi lu (for the).

Slovincian

Etymology

Inherited from Proto-Slavic *po.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /ˈpɵ/
  • Rhymes:
  • Syllabification:

Preposition

  1. denotes location; behind [with accusative]
  2. denotes point to which an action lasts; up to [with accusative]
  3. denotes destination of movement; up to [with accusative]
  4. denotes distributive meaning with a numeral; each; per [with accusative]
  5. denotes conformity according to which something happens; along, according to [with dative]
  6. denotes distributive meaning with stô and tësinc; each [with dative]
  7. with an ordinal numeral, denotes position in a sequence or enumeration; of all [with dative or locative]
  8. (rare) denotes movement along a surface; along, around [with dative]
  9. denotes movement along a surface; along, around [with locative or (rarely) dative]
  10. denotes time; after [with locative]

Derived terms

prefixes

Further reading

Vietnamese

Alternative forms

Etymology

From French pot d’échappement (literally pot of escapement).

Pronunciation

Noun

  1. Short for ống pô (exhaust pipe).