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see

From Wiktionary, the free dictionary
See also:Appendix:Variations of "see"

Translingual

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Etymology

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Abbreviation ofEnglishSeneca orDutchSennecaas.

Symbol

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see

  1. (international standards)ISO 639-3language code forSeneca.

See also

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English

[edit]

Pronunciation

[edit]

Etymology 1

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    FromMiddle Englishseen, fromOld Englishsēon(to see, look, behold, perceive, observe, discern, understand, know), fromProto-West Germanic*sehwan, fromProto-Germanic*sehwaną(to see), fromProto-Indo-European*sekʷ-(to see, notice).

    Cognates

    Cognate withWest Frisiansjen(to see),Dutchzien(to see),Low Germansehn,Germansehen(to see),Danish,Swedish andNorwegian Bokmålse(to see),Norwegian Nynorsksjå(to see), and more distantly withLatinsīgnum(sign, token),Albanianshih(look at, see) imperative ofshoh(to see).

    Verb

    [edit]

    see (third-person singular simple presentsees,present participleseeing,simple pastsawor(dialectal)seenor(dialectal)seentor(dialectal)seed,past participleseenor(dialectal)seentor(dialectal)seedor(dialectal)saw)

    1. (transitive) Toperceive ordetect someone or something with theeyes, or as if bysight.
      • 1913,Joseph C[rosby] Lincoln, chapter I, inMr. Pratt’s Patients, New York, N.Y.; London:D[aniel] Appleton and Company,→OCLC,page18:
        Pretty soon I struck into a sort of path.[]It twisted and turned,[]and opened out into a big clear space like a lawn. And, back of the lawn, was a big, old-fashioned house, with piazzas stretching in front of it, and all blazing with lights. 'Twas the house I'dseen the roof of from the beach.
      • 1959,Georgette Heyer, chapter 1, inThe Unknown Ajax:
        But Richmond[]appeared to lose himself in his own reflections. Some pickled crab, which he had not touched, had been removed with a damson pie; and his sistersaw[]that he had eaten no more than a spoonful of that either.
      • 2016,VOA Learning English (public domain)
        Tosee us, you'd think we've been married for years, but actually just met a few months ago.
      1. Towitness orobserve by personalexperience.
        Hyponyms:experience,suffer
        Now I'veseen it all!
        I'mseeing much better since I got my eyeglasses recalibrated.
        I have been blind since birth and I love to read Braille. When the books arrive in from the library, I can’t wait tosee what stories they have sent me.
      2. To watch (a movie) at acinema, or ashow ontelevision etc.
        Isaw the latest Tarantino flick last week.
    2. To form amentalpicture of.
      • 2013 August 23,Mark Cocker, “Wings of Desire”, inThe Guardian Weekly, volume189, number11, page28:
        It is not just that wesee birds as little versions of ourselves. It is also that, at the same time, they stand outside any moral process. They are utterly indifferent. This absolute oblivion on their part, this lack of sharing, is powerful.
      • 2014 October 14, David Malcolm, “The Great War Re-Remembered: Allohistory and Allohistorical Fiction”, in Martin Löschnigg, Marzena Sokolowska-Paryz, editors,The Great War in Post-Memory Literature and Film[1],Walter de Gruyter GmbH & Co KG.,→ISBN, page173:
        The question of the plausibility of the counter-factual isseen as key in all three discussions of allohistorical fiction (as it is in Demandt's and Ferguson's examinations of allohistory) (cf. Rodiek 25–26; Ritter 15–16; Helbig 32).
      1. (figuratively) Tounderstand.
        Do yousee what I mean?
        • 2013 June 28,Joris Luyendijk, “Our banks are out of control”, inThe Guardian Weekly, volume189, number 3, page21:
          Seeing the British establishment struggle with the financial sector is like watching an alcoholic[]. Until 2008 there was denial over what finance had become.[]But the scandals kept coming[]. A broad section of the political class now recognises the need for change but remains unable tosee the necessity of a fundamental overhaul.
      2. To come to a realization of having been mistaken or misled.
        They're blind to the damage they do, but someday they'llsee.
      3. (transitive) Toforesee,predict, orprophesy.
        The oraclesaw the destruction of the city.
        • 1967,Alan Gordon, Garry Bonner, “Happy Together”, performed byThe Turtles:
          I can'tsee me lovin' nobody but you / For all my life / When you're with me, baby the skies'll be blue / For all my life
      4. (used in the imperative)Used to emphasise a proposition.
        Yousee, Johnny, your Dad isn't your real father.
        You're not welcome here any more,see?
    3. (social) To meet, to visit.
      1. To have an interview with; especially, to make a call upon; to visit.
        You'd bettersee about that with the boss.
      2. Todate frequently.
        I've beenseeing her for two months.
        • 2022 September 9, Dan Shive,El Goonish Shive (webcomic),Comic for Friday, Sep 9, 2022:
          "You're... remarrying? I didn't even know you wereseeing someone. And she's going to live here?"
      3. To visit for a medical appointment.
        You shouldsee a doctor about that rash on your arm.
        I've beenseeing a therapist for three years now.
    4. (ergative) To be thesetting ortime of.
      The 20th centurysaw humanity's first space exploration.
      1999saw the release of many great films.
      • 1995 June 3, David Sprague, “Buffalo Tom Reaches Crossroads: EastWest Trio At Make-Or-Break Point”, inBillboard, volume107, number22, page9:
        It seems as if every passing yearsees the mainstream embrace a longtime cult-favorite alternative rock band.
    5. (by extension)Chiefly followed bythat: toensure that something happens, especially by personallywitnessing it.
      I'llsee you hang for this
      I was at the docksseeing that the goods got properly unloaded.
      Isaw that they didn't make any more trouble.
      • 1765,William Blackstone, “Of Corporations”, inCommentaries on the Laws of England, book I (Of the Rights of Persons), Oxford, Oxfordshire: [] Clarendon Press,→OCLC,page469:
        As to eleemoſynary corporations, by thedotation the founder and his heirs are of common right the legal viſitors, toſee that that property is rightly employed, which would otherwiſe have deſcended to the viſitor himſelf:[]
      • 2001, Joan Lock,Death in Perspective, London:Robert Hale,→ISBN,page52:
        'Don't worry. You won't lose out. I'llsee you get your share of the action. If not now, later.'
      • 2022 October 27, Brian Porter, “The last barrel of oil should be a Canadian one”, inThe Globe and Mail[2], Toronto, ON:The Woodbridge Company,→ISSN,→OCLC, archived fromthe original on17 December 2022:
        We have forgotten that such a transition will require compromise, as we address real energy needs today, and investment, as we adapt to cleaner ways of producing energy tomorrow. A well-managed transition willsee that the opportunities flowing from the transformation dramatically exceed these costs.
    6. (transitive) Towait upon;attend,escort.
      Isaw the old lady safely across the road.
      You cansee yourself out.
      • 2020, Rich Thompson, Jonny Robinson, “Your Will Be Done”‎[3]:
        And in this Name we overcome, for You shallsee us safely home.
    7. (gambling, transitive) To respond to another player'sbet with a bet of equal value.
      I'llsee your twenty dollars and raise you ten.
    8. Todetermine bytrial orexperiment; tofind out (if orwhether).
      I'll come over later andsee if I can fix your computer.
      You think I can't beat you in a race, eh? We'llsee.
      Look tosee if these jeans still fit you.
    9. (used in the imperative) Toreference or tostudy for furtherdetails.
      Step 4: In the system, check out the laptop to the student (see: "Logging Resources" in theTutor Manual).
      For a complete proof of the Poincaré conjecture,see Appendix C.
    10. To examine something closely, or to utilize something, often as a temporary alternative.
      Can Isee that lighter for a second? Mine just quit working.
    11. To include as one of something's experiences.
      The equipment has notseen usage outside of our projects.
      Isaw military service in Vietnam.
    Conjugation
    [edit]
    Conjugation ofsee
    infinitive(to)see
    present tensepast tense
    1st-personsingularseesaw
    2nd-personsingularsee,seestsaw,sawest
    3rd-personsingularsees,seethsaw
    pluralsee
    subjunctiveseesaw
    imperativesee
    participlesseeingseen
    Synonyms
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    Derived terms
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    Translations
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    perceive with the eyes
    understand
    to meet, to visit
    to be the setting or time of
    to ensure that something happens
    to wait upon; attend, escort
    to include as one of something's experiences
    The translations below need to be checked and inserted above into the appropriate translation tables. See instructions atWiktionary:Entry layout § Translations.
    Translations to be checked

    Interjection

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    see

    1. Introducing an explanation
      Synonyms:look,well,so
      See, in order to win the full prize we would have to come up with a scheme to land a rover on the Moon.
    Translations
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    interjection to attract attention

    See also

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    Etymology 2

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      FromMiddle Englishse,see, fromOld Frenchsie(seat, throne; town, capital; episcopal see), fromLatinsēdēs(seat), referring to the bishop'sthrone or chair (compareseat of power) in thecathedral; related to the Latin verbsedēre(to sit).Doublet ofsedes.

      Noun

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      see (pluralsees)

      1. Adiocese,archdiocese; a region of a church, generally headed by abishop or anarchbishop.
        Hyponyms:bishopric,archbishopric
      2. Theoffice of a bishop or archbishop.
        Hyponyms:bishopric,archbishopric
      3. Aseat; asite; a place wheresovereign power isexercised.
      Derived terms
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      Related terms
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      terms related to see (noun)
      Translations
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      diocese
      office of a bishop
      place where sovereign power is exercised

      See also

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      Etymology 3

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      Noun

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      see (pluralsees)

      1. Alternative form ofcee;the name of theLatin-script letterC/c.
        • 1881 April, J. B. Rundell, “The Irregularities of English Spelling: what they Cost and what they are Worth”, inThe Spelling Reformer, and Journal of the English Spelling Reform Association, volume I, number10, London, page147:
          see,ar,eye,ee,ess, cries
        • 1984, Eva Holmquist,No Certain Time, Libra Publishers,→ISBN, page17:
          They were still shocked if you said “eff yousee kay” out loud, though it didn’t stop any of them from doing it.
        • 1996,Sycamore Review, volume 8, page116:
          eff yousee kay why oh you.
        • 2009,Eric Barnes,Shimmer, Denver, Colo.: Unbridled Books,→ISBN, page91:
          I hear you. But hear me out, all right? Because I mean what I’m about to say. Eff-you-see-kay-why-oh-you. Fuck you.
        • 2020, Paul Richardson,Taylah’s Got Talent,→ISBN:
          Her mother said, “Maybe you can have ‘Muck Donnas’, or we could have fish and chips.” Krissy shook her head, “Nah. We no have fwishenchit. We have Kay EffSee nuggers?”
        • 2023, Callum McSorley, chapter 15, inSqueaky Clean,Pushkin Press,→ISBN:
          Same old answer: theeff-you-see-kay-you-pee.
      Derived terms
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      Further reading

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      Anagrams

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      Afrikaans

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      Alternative forms

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      Etymology

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      FromDutchzee, fromMiddle Dutchsêe, fromOld Dutchsēo, fromProto-Germanic*saiwiz.

      Pronunciation

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      Noun

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      see (pluralseë)

      1. sea
        Laasweek het onssee toe gegaan.
        Last week we went to thesea.
        Die trekvoëls vlieg oor die berge, oor diesee, Lapland toe.
        The migratory birds are flying over the mountains, over thesea, to Sápmi.

      Derived terms

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      Estonian

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      Etymology

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      FromProto-Finnic*se, ultimately fromProto-Uralic*śe. cognate toFinnishse,Voticse,Erzyaсе(se,this, that),Northern Khantyси(si,that over yonder; now, then), andNganasan[script needed](sete,he, she).

      Pronunciation

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      Pronoun

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      see (genitiveselle,partitiveseda)

      1. this
      2. that
      3. it
      4. (colloquial, somewhat rude)he,she(usually only used when said person is not present)

      Usage notes

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      In Northern Estonia, and in the standard language,see is both the proximal("this") and distal("that") determiner. In Southern Estonia,too is used as the distal determiner.

      Declension

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      Declension of see (irregular)
      singularplural
      nominativeseeneed
      genitivesellenende
      partitivesedaneid
      illativesellesse / sessenendesse / neisse
      inessiveselles / sesnendes / neis
      elativesellest / sestnendest / neist
      allativesellelenendele / neile
      adessivesellel / selnendel / neil
      ablativesellelt / seltnendelt / neilt
      translativeselleks / seksnendeks / neiks
      terminativeselleninendeni
      essivesellenanendena
      abessiveselletanendeta
      comitativeselleganendega

      Derived terms

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      See also

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      Estonian personal pronouns
      singularplural
      longshortlongshort
      1st personminamameieme
      2nd personfamiliarsinasateiete
      politeTeieTe
      3rd personanimatetematanemadnad
      inanimateseeneed

      Finnish

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      Pronunciation

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      • IPA(key): /ˈseː/,[ˈs̠e̞ː]
      • Rhymes:-eː
      • Syllabification(key):see
      • Hyphenation(key):see

      Etymology 1

      [edit]

        CompareSwedishce,Englishcee, both ultimately fromLatin with thec sound changed from a/k/ to a/s/ as is a common change in languages using the Latin alphabet.

        Alternative forms

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        Noun

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        see

        1. cee (The name of theLatin-script letterC/c)
          • 1990, Eila Hämäläinen,Aletaan I: Suomen kielen oppikirja vasta-alkajille (Let's begin I: Finnish textbook for the beginners), Helsinki: Helsingin Yliopisto (University of Helsinki),→ISBN, page23:
            Luemme kirjaimet näin: aa beesee dee ee äf gee hoo ii jii koo äl äm än oo pee kuu är äs tee uu vee kaksois-vee äks yy tset ruotsalainen oo ää öö
            We read the letters as follows: aa bee see …
        Usage notes
        [edit]
        • Speakers often use the corresponding forms ofc-kirjain(letter C, letter c) instead of inflecting this word, especially in plural. The plural forms may get confused withsei(saithe).
        Declension
        [edit]
        Inflection ofsee (Kotus type 18/maa, no gradation)
        nominativeseeseet
        genitiveseenseiden
        seitten
        partitiveseetäseitä
        illativeseehenseihin
        singularplural
        nominativeseeseet
        accusativenom.seeseet
        gen.seen
        genitiveseenseiden
        seitten
        partitiveseetäseitä
        inessiveseessäseissä
        elativeseestäseistä
        illativeseehenseihin
        adessiveseelläseillä
        ablativeseeltäseiltä
        allativeseelleseille
        essiveseenäseinä
        translativeseeksiseiksi
        abessiveseettäseittä
        instructivesein
        comitativeSee the possessive forms below.
        Possessive forms ofsee(Kotus type 18/maa, no gradation)
        first-person singular possessor
        singularplural
        nominativeseeniseeni
        accusativenom.seeniseeni
        gen.seeni
        genitiveseeniseideni
        seitteni
        partitiveseetäniseitäni
        inessiveseessäniseissäni
        elativeseestäniseistäni
        illativeseeheniseihini
        adessiveseelläniseilläni
        ablativeseeltäniseiltäni
        allativeseelleniseilleni
        essiveseenäniseinäni
        translativeseekseniseikseni
        abessiveseettäniseittäni
        instructive
        comitativeseineni
        second-person singular possessor
        singularplural
        nominativeseesiseesi
        accusativenom.seesiseesi
        gen.seesi
        genitiveseesiseidesi
        seittesi
        partitiveseetäsiseitäsi
        inessiveseessäsiseissäsi
        elativeseestäsiseistäsi
        illativeseehesiseihisi
        adessiveseelläsiseilläsi
        ablativeseeltäsiseiltäsi
        allativeseellesiseillesi
        essiveseenäsiseinäsi
        translativeseeksesiseiksesi
        abessiveseettäsiseittäsi
        instructive
        comitativeseinesi
        first-person plural possessor
        singularplural
        nominativeseemmeseemme
        accusativenom.seemmeseemme
        gen.seemme
        genitiveseemmeseidemme
        seittemme
        partitiveseetämmeseitämme
        inessiveseessämmeseissämme
        elativeseestämmeseistämme
        illativeseehemmeseihimme
        adessiveseellämmeseillämme
        ablativeseeltämmeseiltämme
        allativeseellemmeseillemme
        essiveseenämmeseinämme
        translativeseeksemmeseiksemme
        abessiveseettämmeseittämme
        instructive
        comitativeseinemme
        second-person plural possessor
        singularplural
        nominativeseenneseenne
        accusativenom.seenneseenne
        gen.seenne
        genitiveseenneseidenne
        seittenne
        partitiveseetänneseitänne
        inessiveseessänneseissänne
        elativeseestänneseistänne
        illativeseehenneseihinne
        adessiveseellänneseillänne
        ablativeseeltänneseiltänne
        allativeseellenneseillenne
        essiveseenänneseinänne
        translativeseeksenneseiksenne
        abessiveseettänneseittänne
        instructive
        comitativeseinenne
        Synonyms
        [edit]

        Etymology 2

        [edit]
        Finnish numbers(edit)
        70[a],[b]
         ←  678  → 
           Cardinal:seitsemän
           Colloquial counting form:see,sei
           Ordinal:seitsemäs
           Colloquial ordinal:seikki(regional),seiska
           Ordinalabbreviation:7.,7:s
           Digit name:seiska(informal),seitsikko,seitsemäinen
           Adverbial:seitsemästi
           Multiplier:seitsenkertainen
           Fractional:seitsemäsosa,seitsemännes
        Finnish Wikipedia article on7

          <seitsemän

          Numeral

          [edit]

          see(colloquial)

          1. (counting)seven

          See also

          [edit]

          Etymology 3

          [edit]

          CompareEstoniansee.

          Pronoun

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          see(dialectal, rare)

          1. (Southwest Finnish)alternative form ofse

          Anagrams

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          Friulian

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          Alternative forms

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          Etymology

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          From the verbseâ. CompareItaliansega,Venetansiega,Frenchscie.

          Noun

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          see f (pluralseis)

          1. saw

          Ingrian

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          Pronunciation

          [edit]

          Pronoun

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          see

          1. (dialectal)alternative form ofse
            • 1937, V. A. Tetjurev, translated by N. I. Molotsova,Loonnontiito (ensimäin osa): oppikirja alkușkoulun kolmatta klaassaa vart, Leningrad: Riikin Ucebno-Pedagogiceskoi Izdateljstva, page 7:
              See näyttää, jot pintamaas ono mokomat osat, kummat pallaat.
              This shows that there are such parts in the topsoil that burn.

          Determiner

          [edit]

          see

          1. (dialectal)alternative form ofse

          References

          [edit]
          • Ruben E. Nirvi (1971),Inkeroismurteiden Sanakirja, Helsinki: Suomalais-Ugrilainen Seura, page514

          Middle Dutch

          [edit]

          Etymology

          [edit]

          FromOld Dutchsēo, fromProto-Germanic*saiwiz.

          Noun

          [edit]

          sêe f orm

          1. sea

          Inflection

          [edit]
          Strong feminine noun (irregular)
          singularplural
          nominativesêesêe, sêwe
          accusativesêesêe, sêwe
          genitivesêe, sêwesêe, sêwe
          dativesêe, sêwesêen, sêwen
          Strong masculine noun (irregular)
          singularplural
          nominativesêesêe, sêwe
          accusativesêesêe, sêwe
          genitivesêes, sêwessêe, sêwe
          dativesêe, sêwesêen, sêwen


          Derived terms

          [edit]

          Descendants

          [edit]

          Further reading

          [edit]

          Middle English

          [edit]

          Etymology 1

          [edit]

            Inherited fromOld English, fromProto-West Germanic*saiwi, fromProto-Germanic*saiwiz.

            Alternative forms

            [edit]

            Pronunciation

            [edit]

            Noun

            [edit]

            see (pluralsees)

            1. sea,ocean
              • a.1333,Alcuin, “Poem 22: Quomodo se habet homo?; Fol. 204v”, in William Herebert, transl.,Opera (British Library MS. Add. 46919)‎[4],Hereford; republished asThe Works of William Herebert, OFM (Corpus of Middle English Prose and Verse), [Ann Arbor]:University of Michigan,a.2018:
                Also þe lanterne in þe wynd þat sone is aqueynt, / Ase sparkle in þese þat sone is adreynt, / Ase vom in þe strem þat sone is tothwith, / Ase smoke in þe lift þat passet oure sith.
                Like a lantern in the wind that soon gets quenched, / Like a glimmer in thesea that soon gets drenched / Like foam in the water that soon is dispersed, / Like smoke in the sky that passes [in] our sight.
            2. Abody of water, alake
            Related terms
            [edit]
            Descendants
            [edit]
            References
            [edit]

            Etymology 2

            [edit]

              Borrowed fromOld Frenchsei, fromLatinsēdēs.

              Alternative forms

              [edit]

              Pronunciation

              [edit]

              Noun

              [edit]

              see (pluralsees)

              1. seat,chair
              2. dwelling,residence
              3. Aroyal orepiscopalchair
              4. Aroyal orepiscopalpolity orrealm
              5. Aroyal orepiscopalresidence
              6. (Christianity) TheKingdom of Heaven.
              Descendants
              [edit]
              References
              [edit]

              North Frisian

              [edit]

              Etymology 1

              [edit]

              FromOld Frisian, fromProto-West Germanic*saiwi. Cognates includeDutchzee.

              Noun

              [edit]

              see f

              1. (Heligoland)sea

              Etymology 2

              [edit]

              Borrowed fromGermanSee m(lake), ultimately the same word as above. Seesia for more.

              Noun

              [edit]

              see m (pluralseen)

              1. alternative form ofsia m(lake)

              Scots

              [edit]

              Alternative forms

              [edit]

              Etymology

              [edit]

              FromMiddle Englishseen, fromOld Englishsēon, fromProto-West Germanic*sehwan. Cognate withEnglishsee.

              Pronunciation

              [edit]

              Verb

              [edit]

              see (third-person singular simple presentsees,present participleseein,simple pastsaw,seed,past participleseen)

              1. tosee

              References

              [edit]
              1. ^see,v.”, inThe Dictionary of the Scots Language, Edinburgh:Scottish Language Dictionaries, 2004–present,→OCLC.

              Tetum

              [edit]

              Verb

              [edit]

              see

              1. toturn, topresent

              Votic

              [edit]

              Alternative forms

              [edit]

              Etymology

              [edit]

              FromProto-Finnic*se, fromProto-Uralic*śe.

              Pronunciation

              [edit]

              Pronoun

              [edit]

              see

              1. (demonstrative)that
              2. (demonstrative)ít

              Inflection

              [edit]
              Inflection of see
              singularplural
              nominativeseeneed
              nee
              genitiveseneneije
              nedʹdʹe
              accusativeseneneije
              nedʹdʹe
              partitivesitäneite
              illativesiheneise
              inessivesenezneiz
              elativesenesseneisse
              allativesele
              selle
              neile
              neille
              adessiveselleneille
              ablativeselteneilte
              translativesenessineissi
              **) theterminative is formed by adding the suffix-ssaa to the shortillative (sg) or thegenitive.
              ***) thecomitative is formed by adding the suffix
              -ka to thegenitive.

              See also

              [edit]
              Votic demonstratives
              proximalneutral/distal
              singularkasesee
              pluralkanedneed

              References

              [edit]
              • Hallap, V.; Adler, E.; Grünberg, S.; Leppik, M. (2012), “se1”, inVadja keele sõnaraamat [A dictionary of the Votic language], 2nd edition, Tallinn

              Wailaki

              [edit]

              Etymology

              [edit]

              FromProto-Athabaskan*tseˑ. Cognate withNavajotsé.

              Noun

              [edit]

              see

              1. stone,rock

              References

              [edit]
              • Begay, Kayla Rae (2017),Wailaki Grammar, University of California, Berkeley, page208

              West Frisian

              [edit]

              Etymology

              [edit]

              FromOld Frisian, fromProto-West Germanic*saiwi.

              Pronunciation

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              Noun

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              see c (pluralseeën,diminutiveseeke)

              1. sea

              Derived terms

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              Further reading

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              • see”, inWurdboek fan de Fryske taal (in Dutch),2011
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