tes
From Wiktionary, the free dictionary
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From Wiktionary, the free dictionary
tes
tes
Inherited from Latin tēnsus. Compare the borrowed doublet tens.
tes (feminine tesa, masculine plural tesos, feminine plural teses)
tes
tes
tes
Inherited from Vulgar Latin tās, reduced form of Latin tuās.
tes
Inherited from Proto-Slavic *tesъ.
tes m inan
tes c
tes
Inherited from Old French tes, from Latin tuōs, tuī and tuas, tuae.
tes pl (masculine ton, feminine ta)
tes m pl
tes
From Dutch test, from Old French test, teste (“an earthen vessel, especially a pot in which metals were tried”), from Latin testum (“the lid of an earthen vessel, an earthen vessel, an earthen pot”), from *terstus, past participle of the root *tersa (“dry land”).
tes (plural)
tes
tes m pl or f pl
tes f pl
Audio: | (file) |
See the etymology of the corresponding lemma form.
tes
From Latin thesis and Ancient Greek θέσις (thésis, “a proposition, a statement”), used in Swedish since 1664.
tes c
Borrowed from English test some time during the British occupation of Ternate (1810-1817).
tes
From Middle Welsh tes, from Proto-Brythonic *tes, from Proto-Celtic *texstus, from Proto-Indo-European *tep-. Cognate with Irish teas.
tes m (plural tesoedd)
Note: Certain mutated forms of some words can never occur in standard Welsh.
All possible mutated forms are displayed for convenience.
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