Movatterモバイル変換


[0]ホーム

URL:


Jump to content
WiktionaryThe Free Dictionary
Search

ab

From Wiktionary, the free dictionary
See also:Appendix:Variations of "ab"
Languages (36)
Translingual • English
Äynu • Azerbaijani • Blagar • Catalan • Crimean Tatar • Danish • East Central German • East Yugur • German • Hamer-Banna • Indonesian • Interlingua • Irish • Kein • K'iche' • Latin • Latvian • Livonian • Middle Irish • Norwegian Bokmål • Occitan • Old French • Old High German • Old Occitan • Parauk • Pennsylvania German • Pumpokol • Scots • Scottish Gaelic • Sumerian • Turkish • Volapük • Welsh • Wolof
Page categories

Translingual

[edit]

Etymology

[edit]

Clipping ofEnglishAbkhaz orRussianабха́з(abxáz).

Symbol

[edit]

ab

  1. (international standards)ISO 639-1language code forAbkhaz.

See also

[edit]

English

[edit]
EnglishWikipedia has an article on:
Wikipedia

Pronunciation

[edit]

Etymology 1

[edit]
Abs

Noun

[edit]

ab (pluralabs)

  1. (informal)Clipping ofabdominal muscle[mid 20th century].[1]
    • 2006, H. Peter Steeves,The Things Themselves, page75:
      The bikinied models in most of the ESPN2 shows haveabs. Many of the malnourished bikinied models in the commercials have visible rib cages. How did the two get conflated into a shared vision of beauty?
    • 2010, Bill Geiger, "6-pack Abs in 9 Weeks", Reps! 17:106
      When possible, do yourab workout on a day when you're not training a major muscle group [] .
Usage notes
[edit]
  • Most often used attributively. Substantive use is more common in the plural formabs.
Derived terms
[edit]
Translations
[edit]
abdominal muscle

Etymology 2

[edit]

Abbreviation ofabscess.

Noun

[edit]

ab (pluralabs)

  1. (slang) Anabscess caused by injecting an illegal drug, usuallyheroin.
Translations
[edit]
an abscess caused by injecting an illegal drug

Etymology 3

[edit]

Abbreviations.

Verb

[edit]

ab (third-person singular simple presentabs,present participleabbing,simple past and past participleabbed)

  1. (climbing, informal) Toabseil.
    • 1998,Climbing, numbers178-180, page22:
      I had a climbing rope in my pack, set up an abseil with it, andabbed down to him.
  2. Abbreviation ofabort.

Noun

[edit]

ab

  1. Abbreviation ofabortion.

Preposition

[edit]

ab

  1. Abbreviation ofabout.

Adverb

[edit]

ab

  1. Abbreviation ofabout.

Etymology 4

[edit]

From the spelling books and the fact that it was the first of the letter combinations.[2]

Noun

[edit]

ab (pluralabs)

  1. (US) The early stages of; the beginning process; the start.

References

[edit]
  1. ^Lesley Brown, editor-in-chief, William R. Trumble and Angus Stevenson, editors (2002), “ab”, inThe Shorter Oxford English Dictionary on Historical Principles, 5th edition, Oxford; New York, N.Y.:Oxford University Press,→ISBN, page 2.
  2. ^Mathews, Mitford M, ed. A Dictionary of Americanisms on Historical Principles. 1st. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1956.

Anagrams

[edit]

Äynu

[edit]

Etymology

[edit]

Borrowed fromPersianآب(âb).

Pronunciation

[edit]

Noun

[edit]

ab

  1. water

References

[edit]
  • Otto Ladstätter, Andreas Tietze,Die Abdal (Äynu) in Xinjiang (1994)

Azerbaijani

[edit]
Other scripts
Cyrillicаб
Arabicآب

Etymology

[edit]

Borrowed fromClassical Persianآب(āb).

Pronunciation

[edit]

Noun

[edit]

ab (definite accusativeabı,pluralablar)

  1. (Classical Azerbaijani)water
    Synonym:su

Declension

[edit]
Declension ofab
singularplural
nominativeabablar
definite accusativeabıabları
dativeabaablara
locativeabdaablarda
ablativeabdanablardan
definite genitiveabınabların
Possessive forms ofab
nominative
singularplural
mənim(my)abımablarım
sənin(your)abınabların
onun(his/her/its)abıabları
bizim(our)abımızablarımız
sizin(your)abınızablarınız
onların(their)abı orablarıabları
accusative
singularplural
mənim(my)abımıablarımı
sənin(your)abınıablarını
onun(his/her/its)abınıablarını
bizim(our)abımızıablarımızı
sizin(your)abınızıablarınızı
onların(their)abını orablarınıablarını
dative
singularplural
mənim(my)abımaablarıma
sənin(your)abınaablarına
onun(his/her/its)abınaablarına
bizim(our)abımızaablarımıza
sizin(your)abınızaablarınıza
onların(their)abına orablarınaablarına
locative
singularplural
mənim(my)abımdaablarımda
sənin(your)abındaablarında
onun(his/her/its)abındaablarında
bizim(our)abımızdaablarımızda
sizin(your)abınızdaablarınızda
onların(their)abında orablarındaablarında
ablative
singularplural
mənim(my)abımdanablarımdan
sənin(your)abındanablarından
onun(his/her/its)abındanablarından
bizim(our)abımızdanablarımızdan
sizin(your)abınızdanablarınızdan
onların(their)abından orablarındanablarından
genitive
singularplural
mənim(my)abımınablarımın
sənin(your)abınınablarının
onun(his/her/its)abınınablarının
bizim(our)abımızınablarımızın
sizin(your)abınızınablarınızın
onların(their)abının orablarınınablarının

Related terms

[edit]

Blagar

[edit]

Noun

[edit]

ab

  1. fish

References

[edit]
  • A. Schapper (citing Steinhauer),Elevation in the spatial deictic systems of Alor-Pantar languages, inThe Alor-Pantar languages: History and Typology, edited by Marian Klamer
  • ASJP, citing L. C. Robinson and G. Holton,Internal classification of the Alor-Pantar language family using computational methods applied to the lexicon (2012)

Catalan

[edit]

Pronunciation

[edit]
  • IPA(key): /ap/
  • (Before a voiced consonant or a vowel)IPA(key): /ab/
  • (Before a voiced consonant or a vowel in betacist dialects)IPA(key): /aβ/

Preposition

[edit]

ab

  1. obsolete form ofamb

Crimean Tatar

[edit]

Etymology

[edit]

Borrowed fromPersianآب(āb /âb).

Noun

[edit]

ab

  1. water
    Synonyms:suv,su,bum-bum

Declension

[edit]
Declension ofab
singularplural
nominativeabablar
genitiveabnıñablarnıñ
dativeabğaablarğa
accusativeabnıablarnı
locativeabdaablarda
ablativeabdanablardan

References

[edit]

Danish

[edit]

Etymology 1

[edit]

FromLatinab(of, from).

Pronunciation

[edit]

Preposition

[edit]

ab

  1. ex (out of, sold from)
  2. from (with the origin in time)

Etymology 2

[edit]

Seeabe(to ape, mimic).

Pronunciation

[edit]

Verb

[edit]

ab

  1. imperative ofabe

Further reading

[edit]

East Central German

[edit]

Particle

[edit]

ab

  1. (Strehlen and Schömberg, Silesian)negative particle, do not

East Yugur

[edit]

Etymology

[edit]

FromProto-Mongolic*ab-, compareMongolianавах(avax).

Pronunciation

[edit]
  • IPA(key): /abqʰə/,[aβqʰə]

Verb

[edit]

ab

  1. totake
    Cighudal kelese bu cini arasini xuulj'abqu.
    If you tell a lie I will skin you [take your skin].

German

[edit]

Pronunciation

[edit]

Etymology 1

[edit]

    FromMiddle High Germanabe,ab, fromOld High Germanab, fromProto-West Germanic*ab, fromProto-Germanic*ab.

    Preposition

    [edit]

    ab [withdative]

    1. beginning at that time or location;from
      Ab heute verfügbar.
      Availablefrom today.
    Derived terms
    [edit]
    Descendants
    [edit]
    • Norwegian Bokmål:ab

    Etymology 2

    [edit]

      From adverbial use of the prefixab- in verbs such asabschlagen,abgehen etc. CompareEnglishoff.

      Adjective

      [edit]

      ab (indeclinable,predicative only)

      1. (colloquial, predicative only)off,detached(not attached to anything anymore, having come off)
        Der Arm istab.
        The arm has been cut off.
        (literally, “isoff”)
      2. (nonstandard, attributive)off,detached(not attached to anything anymore, having come off)
        Derabbe Arm ist verschwunden.
        Thecut-off arm has disappeared.
      Usage notes
      [edit]
      • Thepredicative use is common in colloquial German throughout the country.
      • The nonstandardattributive forms are mostly used in Western and Northern Germany and are considerably less common than the predicative use. They used to be used mostlyjocularly, but become gradually more frequent since they are much shorter than the appropriate full verb forms such asabgetrennt(disconnected, severed).
      Positive forms ofab (uncomparable)
      number & gendersingularplural
      masculinefeminineneuter
      predicativeeristabsieistabesistabsiesindab
      strong declension
      (without article)
      nominativeabber1abbe1abbes1abbe1
      genitiveabben1abber1abben1abber1
      dativeabbem1abber1abbem1abben1
      accusativeabben1abbe1abbes1abbe1
      weak declension
      (with definite article)
      nominativederabbe1dieabbe1dasabbe1dieabben1
      genitivedesabben1derabben1desabben1derabben1
      dativedemabben1derabben1demabben1denabben1
      accusativedenabben1dieabbe1dasabbe1dieabben1
      mixed declension
      (with indefinite article)
      nominativeeinabber1eineabbe1einabbes1(keine)abben1
      genitiveeinesabben1einerabben1einesabben1(keiner)abben1
      dativeeinemabben1einerabben1einemabben1(keinen)abben1
      accusativeeinenabben1eineabbe1einabbes1(keine)abben1

      1Nonstandard.

      • The inflected attributive forms retain the devoiced consonant. Hence, sometimes they are spelled withp, rather thanb:appes Bein.
      Declension
      [edit]

      Indeclinable, predicative-only.

      Related terms

      [edit]

      Hamer-Banna

      [edit]

      Pronunciation

      [edit]

      Determiner

      [edit]

      ab

      1. alternative form ofábi

      References

      [edit]
      • Petrollino, Sara (2016),A Grammar of Hamar: A South Omotic language of Ethiopia[1], Leiden University, page297

      Indonesian

      [edit]

      Noun

      [edit]

      ab (pluralab-ab)

      1. small pot
      2. (dated) father (aba)

      Interlingua

      [edit]

      Preposition

      [edit]

      ab

      1. from

      Irish

      [edit]

      Etymology 1

      [edit]

      FromLatinabbas(father), fromAncient Greekἀββᾶς(abbâs), fromAramaicאַבָּא(’abbā,father).

      Pronunciation

      [edit]

      Noun

      [edit]

      ab m (genitive singularaba,nominative pluralabaí)

      1. (Christianity)abbot
        Coordinate terms:ban-ab,máthairab
      Declension
      [edit]
      Declension ofab (third declension)
      forms with thedefinite article
      singularplural
      nominativeant-abnahabaí
      genitiveanabanan-abaí
      dativeleis anab
      donab
      leis nahabaí
      Derived terms
      [edit]

      Etymology 2

      [edit]

      Contraction of the relative particlea and the prevocalic variant of the past/conditional copula particleb’.

      Pronunciation

      [edit]

      Particle

      [edit]

      ab

      1. alternative form ofba(used in relative clauses before a vowel sound)
        Fear maithab ea é.
        He was a good man.
        buachaillab áirde ná mo dheartháira boy (who was) taller than my brother
      Related terms
      [edit]
      Irish copular forms
      simple copular forms
      affirmativenegativeinterrogativenegative
      interrogative
      present/future
      main clauseisannach
      relative clausedirectnach
      indirectar,arbv
      other subordinate clausegur,gurbvannach
      past/conditional
      main clauseba,b’vníor,níorbhvar,arbhvnár,nárbhv
      relative clausedirectba,abvnár,nárbhv
      indirectar,arbhv
      other subordinate clausegur,gurbhvar,arbhvnár,nárbhv
      present subjunctive
      gura,gurabvnára,nárabv
      compound copular forms
      base wordpresent/futurepast/conditional
      cár,cárbvcár,cárbhv
      cér,cérbvcér,cérbhv
      mba,mb’v
      de/dodar,darbvdar,darbhv
      faoifaoinar,faoinarbvfaoinar,faoinarbhv
      iinar,inarbvinar,inarbhv
      lelenar,lenarbvlenar,lenarbhv
      másba,b’v
      muramura,murabvmurar,murarbhv
      ó(preposition)ónar,ónarbvónar,ónarbhv
      ó(conjunction)ósóba,ób’v
      trítrínar,trínarbvtrínar,trínarbhv

      v Used before vowel sounds

      Mutation

      [edit]
      Mutated forms ofab
      radicaleclipsiswithh-prothesiswitht-prothesis
      abn-abhabt-ab

      Note: Certain mutated forms of some words can never occur in standard Modern Irish.
      All possible mutated forms are displayed for convenience.

      Further reading

      [edit]

      Kein

      [edit]

      Noun

      [edit]

      ab

      1. fire

      Further reading

      [edit]

      K'iche'

      [edit]

      Pronunciation

      [edit]

      Noun

      [edit]

      ab

      1. hammock
      2. steam
      3. mist

      References

      [edit]

      Latin

      [edit]

      Alternative forms

      [edit]

      Etymology

      [edit]

        FromProto-Italic*ap, fromProto-Indo-European*h₂epó(off, away) (whenceEnglishoff,of andafter).[1] See alsopo-. Cognate withᾰ̓πό(ăpó). The reconstruction of the Proto-Italic form is somewhat uncertain, as it's not clear when or how the final vowel of the PIE form was lost. The voicing of the final consonant to-b can be interpreted as an example of regular voicing of plosives in word-final position, as infēced < *fēcet, a sound change that some reconstruct at the common Italic stage. Others explain-b here as the result of analogical extension from clusters ending in a voiced consonant.[2] The formap- is attested in composition in Latinaperiō andUmbrian𐌀𐌐𐌄𐌇𐌕𐌓𐌄(apehtre).

        Pronunciation

        [edit]

        Preposition

        [edit]

        ab (+ablative)

        1. (indicating ablation):from,away from,outof
        2. (indicating ablation):down from
        3. (indicatingagency):(source of action or event)by,by means of
        4. (indicatinginstrumentality):(source of action or event)by,by means of,with
          • 56BCE,Cicero,Pro Sestio42.92:
            Horum utro uti nolumus, altero est utendum. vim volumus exstingui, ius valeat necesse est, id est iudicia, quibus omne ius continetur; iudicia displicent aut nulla sunt, vis dominetur necesse est. hoc vident omnes: Milo et vidit et fecit, ut ius experiretur, vim depelleret. altero uti voluit, ut virtus audaciam vinceret; altero usus necessario est,ne virtusab audacia vinceretur.
            ...so that virtue might not be overwhelmedby insolence.
          • 45BCE,Cicero,De finibus bonorum et malorum1.2:
            Quamquam philosophiae quidem vituperātōribus satis respōnsum est eō librō, quōā nōbīs philosophia dēfēnsa et collaudāta est, cum esset accūsāta et vituperātaab Hortēnsiō.
            Although indeed to the vituperators of philosophy an adequate response is in that book, in which philosophy has been defended and highly praisedby us [me], when it had been accused and vituperatedby Hortensius.
        5. (indicatingassociation):to,with
          • Ad,Rōmānōs IIX.XXX:
            ... Sī Deusā nōbīs est, quis contrā nōs?
            ... If God iswith us, who is against us?
        6. (indicatinglocation):at,on,in
        7. (time)after,since
          Ab urbe conditā.
          From the founding of the City.

        Usage notes

        [edit]

        Used in conjunction with passive verbs to mark the agent.

        • Liberā discipulō aperītur.
          The book is openedby the student.

        Related terms

        [edit]

        Descendants

        [edit]
        • French:à
        • Italian:a
        • Spanish:a
        • Portuguese:a
        • Norwegian Bokmål:a,ab(learned)

        References

        [edit]
        1. ^De Vaan, Michiel (2008), “ab, abs, as-, ā-, af-, au-”, inEtymological Dictionary of Latin and the other Italic Languages (Leiden Indo-European Etymological Dictionary Series; 7), Leiden, Boston: Brill,→ISBN,pages19-20
        2. ^Vaan, M. A. C. de. (2009). Latin au- 'away', an allomorph of ab-. Anuari De Filologia 25-26 [2003-2004]. Secció D: Studia Graeca Et Latina. Número 12, 25-26, 141-147. Retrieved fromhttps://hdl.handle.net/1887/18683

        Further reading

        [edit]
        • ab”, inCharlton T. Lewis and Charles Short (1879),A Latin Dictionary, Oxford: Clarendon Press
        • ab”, inGaffiot, Félix (1934),Dictionnaire illustré latin-français, Hachette.
        • ab, in ΛΟΓΕΙΟΝ [Logeion] Dictionaries for Ancient Greek and Latin (in English, French, Spanish, German, Dutch and Chinese),University of Chicago, since 2011
        • Carl Meißner; Henry William Auden (1894),Latin Phrase-Book[2], London:Macmillan and Co.
          • a gentle ascent:collis leniter ab infimo acclivis (opp.leniter a summo declivis)
          • the east winds are blowing:venti ab ortu solis flant
          • the Rhone[TR2] is the frontier between the Helvetii and the Sequani:Rhodanus Sequanos ab Helvetiis dividit
          • to be far from town:longe, procul abesse ab urbe
          • to devote every spare moment to...; to work without intermission at a thing:nullum tempus intermittere, quin (alsoab opere, orad opus)
          • in the fifth year from the founding of the city:anno ab urbe condita quinto
          • to be always at a person's side:ab alicuius latere non discedere
          • to turn one's gaze away from an object:oculos deicere, removere ab aliqua re
          • to trace one's descent from some one:originem ab aliquo trahere, ducere
          • a native of England:ortus ab Anglis ororiundus ex Anglis
          • from one's entry into civil life:ab ineunte (prima) aetate (De Or. 1. 21. 97)
          • to begin with a thing:initium capere; incipere ab aliqua re
          • to start from small beginnings:ab exiguis initiis proficisci
          • the motive, cause, is to be found in..:causa repetenda est ab aliqua re (notquaerenda)
          • to originate in, arise from:ab aliqua re proficisci
          • to rescue from destruction:ab exitio, ab interitu aliquem vindicare
          • to gain a person's esteem, friendship:gratiam inire ab aliquoorapud aliquem
          • to look favourably upon; to support:propenso animo, studio esse orpropensa voluntate esse in aliquem (opp.averso animo esse ab aliquo)
          • to gain one's point with any one:aliquid ab aliquo impetrare
          • to win golden opinions from every one:maximam ab omnibus laudem adipisci
          • to have a good or bad reputation, be spoken well, ill of:bene, male audire (ab aliquo)
          • to use up, make full use of one's spare time:otio abūti orotium ad suum usum transferre
          • to draw away some one's attention from a thing:alicuius animum ab aliqua re abducere
          • to hold the same views:idem sentire (opp.dissentire ab aliquo)
          • to apply to a person for advice:consilium petere ab aliquo
          • to rescue from oblivion:aliquid ab oblivione vindicare
          • to be quite uncivilised:ab omni cultu et humanitate longe abesse (B. G. 1. 1. 3)
          • to be educated by some one:litteras discere ab aliquo
          • to receive instruction from some one:institui orerudiri ab aliquo
          • to derive an argument from a thing:argumentum ducere, sumere ex aliqua re orpetere ab aliqua re
          • to disagree with a person:dissentire, dissidere ab orcum aliquo
          • to go back to the remote ages:repetere ab ultima (extrema, prisca) antiquitate (vetustate), ab heroicis temporibus
          • to have no taste for the fine arts:abhorrere ab artibus (opp.delectari artibus)
          • to go a long way back (in narrative):longe, alte (longius, altius) repetere (either absolute orab aliqua re)
          • no sound passed his lips:nulla vox est ab eo audita
          • to extract an answer from some one:responsum ab aliquo ferre, auferre
          • to translate from Plato:ab orde (notex)Platone vertere, convertere, transferre
          • to form, derive a word from... (used of the man who first creates the word):vocabulum,verbum, nomen ducere ab, ex...
          • the wordamicitia comes fromamare:nomen amicitiae (or simplyamicitia)dicitur ab amando
          • to be separated by a deadly hatred:capitali odio dissidere ab aliquo (De Am. 1. 2)
          • to prevent some one from growing angry, appease his anger:animum alicuius ab iracundia revocare
          • to revenge oneself on some one:ulcisci aliquem,poenas expetere ab aliquo
          • to revenge oneself on another for a thing or on some one's behalf:poenas alicuius oralicuius rei repetere ab aliquo
          • to protect any one from wrong:ab iniuria aliquem defendere
          • to neglect one's duty:ab officio discedere
          • to neglect one's duty:de, ab officio decedere
          • to let oneself be perverted from one's duty:ab officio abduci, avocari
          • to have an inclination for a thing:propensum, proclivem esse ad aliquid (opp.alienum, aversum esse, abhorrere ab aliqua re)
          • the principles which I have followed since I came to man's estate:meae vitae rationes ab ineunte aetate susceptae (Imp. Pomp. 1. 1.)
          • to summon some one from the dead:aliquem ab inferis ora mortuis evocare, excitare (passiveab inferis exsistere)
          • to ask for an oracular response:oraculum petere (ab aliquo)
          • from beginning to end:ab ovo usque ad mala (proverb.)
          • the conversation began with..:sermo ortus est ab aliqua re
          • something has been left as a legacy by some one:hereditate aliquid relictum est ab aliquo
          • I have received a legacy from a person:hereditas ad me ormihi venit ab aliquo (Verr. 2. 1. 10)
          • to lend, borrow money at interest:pecuniam fenori (fenore) alicui dare, accipere ab aliquo
          • to borrow money from some one:pecuniam mutuari orsumere mutuam ab aliquo
          • to demand an account, an audit of a matter:rationem alicuius rei reposcere aliquem orab aliquo
          • to demand an account, an audit of a matter:rationem ab aliquo reptere de aliqua re (Cluent. 37. 104)
          • to gain some one's favour:gratiam inire apud aliquem, ab aliquo (cf. sect. V. 12)
          • to be on a person's side (notab alicuius partibus):ab (cum) aliquo stare (Brut. 79. 273)
          • to hold different views in politics:ab aliquo in re publica dissentire
          • to deliver some one from slavery:ab aliquo servitutem orservitutis iugum depellere
          • to exact a penalty from some one:poenam petere, repetere ab aliquo
          • to exact a penalty from some one:poenas expetere ab aliquo
          • to lay down arms:ab armis discedere (Phil. 11. 33)
          • to demand satisfaction, restitution:res repetere (ab aliquo) (Off. 1. 11. 36)
          • to gain a victory over the enemy:victoriam reportare ab hoste
          • putting aside, except:cum discessi, -eris, -eritis ab

        Latvian

        [edit]

        Conjunction

        [edit]

        ab

        1. (archaic)or

        Synonyms

        [edit]

        Preposition

        [edit]

        ab

        1. (archaic)around

        Synonyms

        [edit]

        Livonian

        [edit]

        Pronunciation

        [edit]
        • IPA(key): /ˈɑˀb/,[ˈɑˀb̥]

        Etymology 1

        [edit]

          (Thisetymology is missing or incomplete. Please add to it, or discuss it at theEtymology scriptorium.)

          Noun

          [edit]

          a’b

          1. shoulder
            • 2012–2013, “ab”, in Tiit-Rein Viitso, Valts Ernštreits, editors,Līvõkīel-ēstikīel-lețkīel sõnārōntõz [Livonian-Estonian-Latvian Dictionary]‎[3], Tartu, Riga: Tartu Ülikool, Latviešu valodas aģentūra:
              pǟ umabūd vaisõ sizzõl viedtõd
              recoiled,flinched
              (literally, “head is drawn inshoulders”)
          Usage notes
          [edit]

          LĒL also features a partitive plural form with-īdi as in the exampleabīdi nustõ "to shrug."

          Declension
          [edit]
          Declension ofa’b (72)
          singular(ikšlu’g)plural(pǟgiņlu’g)
          nominative(nominatīv)a’babūd
          genitive(genitīv)a’babūd
          partitive(partitīv)a’bbõa’bḑi
          dative(datīv)a’bbõnabūdõn
          instrumental(instrumentāl)a’bkõksabūdõks
          illative(illatīv)a’bbõa’bži
          inessive(inesīv)a’bsõa’bši
          elative(elatīv)a’bstõa’bšti

          Etymology 2

          [edit]

            FromProto-Finnic*api.

            Noun

            [edit]

            a’b

            1. help
            Declension
            [edit]
            Declension ofa’b (72)
            singular(ikšlu’g)plural(pǟgiņlu’g)
            nominative(nominatīv)a’babūd
            genitive(genitīv)a’babūd
            partitive(partitīv)a’bbõa’bḑi
            dative(datīv)a’bbõnabūdõn
            instrumental(instrumentāl)a’bkõksabūdõks
            illative(illatīv)a’bbõa’bži
            inessive(inesīv)a’bsõa’bši
            elative(elatīv)a’bstõa’bšti

            References

            [edit]
            • Tiit-Rein Viitso; Valts Ernštreits (2012–2013), “a’b”, inLīvõkīel-ēstikīel-lețkīel sõnārōntõz [Livonian-Estonian-Latvian Dictionary]‎[4] (in Estonian and Latvian), Tartu, Rīga: Tartu Ülikool, Latviešu valodas aģentūra

            Middle Irish

            [edit]

            Alternative forms

            [edit]

            Etymology

            [edit]

            FromOld Irishaub, fromProto-Celtic*abū.

            Noun

            [edit]

            ab f (genitiveaba)

            1. river

            Descendants

            [edit]

            Mutation

            [edit]
            Mutation ofab
            radicallenitionnasalization
            ab
            (pronounced with/h/ inh-prothesis environments)
            unchangedn-ab

            Note: Certain mutated forms of some words can never occur in Middle Irish.
            All possible mutated forms are displayed for convenience.

            Norwegian Bokmål

            [edit]
            Norwegian BokmålWikipedia has an article on:
            Wikipedianb

            Pronunciation

            [edit]

            Etymology 1

            [edit]

            FromGermanab(from), fromMiddle High Germanab, fromOld High Germanab(of), fromProto-Germanic*ab(away, away from), fromProto-Indo-European*h₂epó(off, away).

            Preposition

            [edit]

            ab

            1. (economics)from; (i.e. delivered) for the seller's expense at a location and forwarded for the buyer's expense
              ab Frankfurtfrom Frankfurt
              ab varelagerfrom inventory
              ab fabrikkfrom factory
            2. (economics, obsolete)as of
              ab mai
              as of May
            Derived terms
            [edit]

            Etymology 2

            [edit]

            FromLatinab(from, away from, on, in), fromProto-Italic*ab, fromProto-Indo-European*h₂epó(off, away).

            Pronunciation

            [edit]

            Preposition

            [edit]

            ab

            1. only used inab ovo(ab ovo)

            Etymology 3

            [edit]

            Abbreviation ofavbetaling(installment), verbal noun form ofavbetale(to pay off), a compound ofav +‎betale, first partav(of, from, by, off), fromOld Norseaf(of, from, off, by), fromProto-Germanic*ab(away from), fromProto-Indo-European*h₂epó(off, away) + second partbetale(pay, purchase), fromMiddle Low Germanbetalen(of, from, off, by), last part is the suffix-ing(-ing), fromOld Norse-ingr m,-ingi m,-ing f, fromProto-Germanic*-ingō,*-ungō.

            Noun

            [edit]

            ab

            1. (colloquial)abbreviation ofavbetaling(installment)
              • 1974, Kari Bakke,Gråspurven, page22:
                møbler og vaskemaskin på AB
                furniture and washing machine on installments
            Derived terms
            [edit]
            Related terms
            [edit]

            References

            [edit]
            • “ab_1” inDet Norske Akademis ordbok (NAOB).
            • “ab_2” inDet Norske Akademis ordbok (NAOB).
            • “ab_3” inDet Norske Akademis ordbok (NAOB).
            • ab” inStore norske leksikon

            Occitan

            [edit]

            Alternative forms

            [edit]

            Etymology

            [edit]

            FromLatinab.

            Preposition

            [edit]

            ab

            1. (Guardiol)with

            References

            [edit]
            • Pei, Mario A. 1948. Ab and the survival of the Latin genitive in Old Italian.Italica 25. 104–106.

            Old French

            [edit]

            Etymology

            [edit]

            Reduced form ofLatinapud.

            Preposition

            [edit]

            ab

            1. (10th century)with

            Synonyms

            [edit]
            • avoec(used throughout Old French into the Middle and modern French periods)

            Old High German

            [edit]

            Etymology

            [edit]

              FromProto-Germanic*ab.

              Preposition

              [edit]

              ab

              1. of

              Descendants

              [edit]
              • German:ab
                • Norwegian Bokmål:ab

              Old Occitan

              [edit]

              Etymology

              [edit]

              Reduced form ofLatinapud

              Preposition

              [edit]

              ab

              1. with
                • c.1000, unknown,Lo Poèma de Boecis:
                  Non comprariasab mil liuras d’argent.
                  [That] you couldn't buy with a thousand pounds of silver.

              Descendants

              [edit]

              Parauk

              [edit]

              Pronunciation

              [edit]

              Verb

              [edit]

              ab

              1. togive, handover.

              Pennsylvania German

              [edit]

              Etymology

              [edit]

              CompareGermanab,Dutchaf,Englishoff.

              Preposition

              [edit]

              ab

              1. off
              2. from
              3. away

              Pumpokol

              [edit]

              Etymology

              [edit]

              Inherited fromProto-Yeniseian*ab(father).

              Noun

              [edit]

              ab (M., W., VW., Kl.)

              1. (sociology)father

              Further reading

              [edit]
              • Werner, Heinrich (2005), “ab”, inDie Jenissej-Sprachen des 18. Jahrhunderts, Wiesbaden: Harrassowitz Verlag,→ISBN, page179

              Scots

              [edit]

              Alternative forms

              [edit]

              Etymology

              [edit]

              Uncertain. CompareEnglishhobble,Dutchhobbelen(to lurch),Danishhappe(to stutter),Norwegianjabba(to stammer) and colloquialSwedishhappla(to stutter).

              Pronunciation

              [edit]

              Noun

              [edit]

              ab (pluralabs)

              1. (Orkney)impediment,hindrance,objection.

              Verb

              [edit]

              ab (simple pastabed)

              1. (Orkney) tohinder

              References

              [edit]

              Scottish Gaelic

              [edit]

              Noun

              [edit]

              ab m (genitive singularaba,pluralabachan)

              1. alternative form ofaba

              Sumerian

              [edit]

              Romanization

              [edit]

              ab

              1. romanization of𒀊(ab)
              2. romanization of𒀖(ab)

              Turkish

              [edit]

              Alternative forms

              [edit]

              Etymology

              [edit]

              FromOttoman Turkishآب(āb,water), fromClassical Persianآب(âb).

              Pronunciation

              [edit]

              Noun

              [edit]

              ab (definite accusativeabı,pluralablar)

              1. (obsolete, poetic)water

              Declension

              [edit]
              Declension ofab
              singularplural
              nominativeabablar
              definite accusativeabıabları
              dativeabaablara
              locativeabdaablarda
              ablativeabdanablardan
              genitiveabınabların
              Possessive forms
              nominative
              singularplural
              1st singularabımablarım
              2nd singularabınabların
              3rd singularabıabları
              1st pluralabımızablarımız
              2nd pluralabınızablarınız
              3rd pluralablarıabları
              definite accusative
              singularplural
              1st singularabımıablarımı
              2nd singularabınıablarını
              3rd singularabınıablarını
              1st pluralabımızıablarımızı
              2nd pluralabınızıablarınızı
              3rd pluralablarınıablarını
              dative
              singularplural
              1st singularabımaablarıma
              2nd singularabınaablarına
              3rd singularabınaablarına
              1st pluralabımızaablarımıza
              2nd pluralabınızaablarınıza
              3rd pluralablarınaablarına
              locative
              singularplural
              1st singularabımdaablarımda
              2nd singularabındaablarında
              3rd singularabındaablarında
              1st pluralabımızdaablarımızda
              2nd pluralabınızdaablarınızda
              3rd pluralablarındaablarında
              ablative
              singularplural
              1st singularabımdanablarımdan
              2nd singularabındanablarından
              3rd singularabındanablarından
              1st pluralabımızdanablarımızdan
              2nd pluralabınızdanablarınızdan
              3rd pluralablarındanablarından
              genitive
              singularplural
              1st singularabımınablarımın
              2nd singularabınınablarının
              3rd singularabınınablarının
              1st pluralabımızınablarımızın
              2nd pluralabınızınablarınızın
              3rd pluralablarınınablarının
              Predicative forms
              singularplural
              1st singularabımablarım
              2nd singularabsınablarsın
              3rd singularab
              abdır
              ablar
              ablardır
              1st pluralabızablarız
              2nd pluralabsınızablarsınız
              3rd pluralablarablardır

              Derived terms

              [edit]

              References

              [edit]
              • ab”, inTurkish dictionaries, Türk Dil Kurumu

              Volapük

              [edit]

              Etymology

              [edit]

              Borrowed fromGermanaber(but).

              Pronunciation

              [edit]

              Conjunction

              [edit]

              ab

              1. but.

              Welsh

              [edit]

              Etymology

              [edit]

              Fromfab, soft mutation ofmab(son).

              Pronunciation

              [edit]

              Prefix

              [edit]

              ab

              1. Apatronymic indicator;son of.

              Usage notes

              [edit]

              This form is found before vowels. Before a consonant, the formap is used.

              Antonyms

              [edit]

              References

              [edit]
              • R. J. Thomas, G. A. Bevan, P. J. Donovan, A. Hawke et al., editors (1950–present), “ab”, inGeiriadur Prifysgol Cymru Online (in Welsh), University of Wales Centre for Advanced Welsh & Celtic Studies

              Wolof

              [edit]

              Article

              [edit]

              ab

              1. a/an(singular indefinite article)

              Usage notes

              [edit]

              Precedes the noun.

              Retrieved from "https://en.wiktionary.org/w/index.php?title=ab&oldid=88224439"
              Categories:
              Hidden categories:

              [8]ページ先頭

              ©2009-2025 Movatter.jp