te
( international standards ) ISO 639-1 language code forTelugu . Sense 1: Altered fromsi in the 19th century to prevent having two notes of the musical scale starting with the same letter, to becomete and laterti .
Sense 2: The vowel ofti then changed to 'e' to signify a flattened note.
te (plural tes )
( music , obsolete ) Insolfège , the seventh note of a major scale (the noteB in thefixed-do system):ti .Synonym: si ( music ) Insolfège , the lowered seventh note of a major scale (the noteB-flat in thefixed-do system):ta .Synonyms: ta ,B-flat ,li te (plural tes )
The name of theCyrillic script letter Т /т . FromDutch te .
te
indicating excess: too te
modifying an infinitive verb: to locatedat ,in te
tosee Ross, M., & Næss, Å. (2007 ) “An Oceanic origin for Äiwoo, the language of the Reef Islands?”, inOceanic Linguistics , volume46 , number 2 . Cited in: "Äiwoo " in Greenhill, S.J.,Blust, R. , &Gray, R.D. (2008).The Austronesian Basic Vocabulary Database: From Bioinformatics to Lexomics .Evolutionary Bioinformatics , 4:271–283.te
tounderstand ,perceive tohear FromProto-Albanian *te-k(u) , fromProto-Indo-European *to- ( “ it ” ) . Governs the nominative determinative, due to its relatively recent use as a preposition and its origin as a shortened form ofAlbanian *te-k(u) .
te (+ nominative )
at Unë jam te pijetorja. I'm at the bar. to ( with a human referent ) at ( someone's ) placeJemi te unë. We're at my place. FromLatin te . Akin toSpanish te andFrench te .
te
Second-person singular dative, accusative and prepositional pronoun ;you Takes the formt' before verbs beginning with vowel sounds. Aragonese personal pronouns
The forms shown in the table are the most widespread ones. Some varieties use different forms:nusotros /as (Ansotano, Cheso, Somontanos) andnusaltros /as (Benasquese and Belsetán).usté (s) (Benasquese),ustet (z) (Ansotano),vustet (z) (Tensino, Somontanos)vusotros /as (Ansotano, Cheso, Somontanos) andvusaltros /as (Benasquese and Belsetán).ell (s) (Benasquese) ander (s) (Belsetán).era (s) (Belsetán).mos (Ribagorçan). Before third-person pronouns and the adverbial pronounen the contracted formmo' is used.li (s) (Cheso, Tensino).el (Ribagorçan). The contracted forml' is used before verbs beginning with vowel sounds and'l after pronouns ending in vowels andno ( “ no, not ” ) .es ,els (Ribagorçan). These forms are contracted to's and'ls after pronouns ending in vowels andno ( “ no, not ” ) . The contracted forms are used before verbs beginning with vowel sounds. In Ribagorçan the contracted formto' is used before third-person pronouns and the adverbial pronounen . “te ”, inAragonario, diccionario castellano–aragonés (in Spanish) FromLatin tē , fromtū .
te
you (second-person singular direct pronoun)you (second-person singular indirect pronoun)te inan
tea
te inan
The name of theLatin-script letterT /t . ( Latin-script letter names ) a ,be ,ze ,de ,e ,efe ,ge ,hatxe ,i ,jota ,ka ,ele ,eme ,ene ,eñe ,o ,pe ,ku ,erre ,ese ,te ,u ,uve ,uve bikoitz ,ixa ,i greko ,zeta te
wood ,tree FromProto-Brythonic *ti , fromProto-Celtic *tū , fromProto-Indo-European *túh₂ . Cognate toWelsh ti .
te
you (singular) (Thisetymology is missing or incomplete. Please add to it, or discuss it at theEtymology scriptorium .)
te f (plural tes )
The name of theLatin-script letterT /t . FromLatin tē (accusative oftū ).
te (enclitic ,contracted 't ,proclitic et ,contracted proclitic t' )
you ,thee (direct or indirect object)yourself (reflexive pronoun)-te is the full (plena ) form of the pronoun. It is normally used after verbs ending with aconsonant or ⟨u⟩, or between some adverbs/pronouns and a verb. In some varieties of Catalan (Balearic/Valencian) it can also occur in sentence-initial position.Puc ajudar-te ? ―Can I help you? Mou-te ! ―Move! Catalan personal pronouns and clitics strong/subject weak (direct object) weak (indirect object) possessive proclitic enclitic proclitic enclitic singular 1st person standard jo ,mi 3 em ,m’ -me ,’m em ,m’ -me ,’m meu majestic1 nós ens -nos ,’ns ens -nos ,’ns nostre 2nd person standard tu et ,t’ -te ,’t et ,t’ -te ,’t teu formal1 vós us -vos ,-us us -vos ,-us vostre very formal2 vostè el ,l’ -lo ,’l li -li seu 3rd person m ell el ,l’ -lo ,’l li -li seu f ella la ,l’ 4 -la li -li seu n ho -ho li -li seu plural 1st person nosaltres ens -nos ,’ns ens -nos ,’ns nostre 2nd person standard vosaltres us -vos ,-us us -vos ,-us vostre formal2 vostès els -los ,’ls els -los ,’ls seu 3rd person m ells els -los ,’ls els -los ,’ls seu f elles les -les els -los ,’ls seu 3rd person reflexivesi es ,s’ -se ,’s es ,s’ -se ,’s seu adverbial ablative/genitive en ,n’ -ne ,’n locative hi -hi
1 Behaves grammatically as plural. 2 Behaves grammatically as third person.3 Only as object of a preposition. 4 Not before unstressed (h)i-, (h)u-.
Originally fromHokkien 茶 ( tê ) .
te m (plural tes )
atea plant (Camellia sinensis ) tea ; the product made from the leaves of the tea planttea ; a light afternoon meal at which tea is commonly servedte
Alternative spelling ofteh te
stone FromProto-Brythonic *ti , fromProto-Celtic *tū , fromProto-Indo-European *túh₂ .
te
you ( informal second person singular pronoun ) ,thou ,thee FromEnglish tea fromDutch thee
te m (plural teow )
tea te
( informal ) Combined form ofto +je FromLatin tū .
te
( second-person singular pronoun ) you ,thou IPA (key ) : /ˈteːˀ/ ,[ˈtˢe̝ːˀ] ,[ˈtsʰe̝ˀ] Borrowed fromDutch thee , fromHokkien 茶 ( tê ,“ tea ” ) , compareEnglish tea ,German Tee ,French thé .
the ( unofficial since 1872, but still common ) te c (singular definite teen ,plural indefinite teer )
tea ( plant ) (Camellia sinensis )tea ( the dried leaves from the tea plant, also parts from other plants ) ( uncountable ) tea ( a beverage made from tea leaves, also similar beverages made from other plants ) FromOld Norse tjá , fromProto-Germanic *tīhaną ( “ to show ” ) , cognate withIcelandic tjá ,Faroese tíggja ,Swedish te ,German zeihen ( “ to accuse ” ) . The verb goes back toProto-Indo-European *deyḱ- ( “ to show ” ) , which is also the source ofLatin dīcō ( “ to say ” ) ,Ancient Greek δείκνυμι ( deíknumi ,“ to show ” ) .
te (present tense ter ,past tense teede ,past participle teet )
( reflexive ) behave Conjugation ofte active passive present ter — past teede — infinitive te — imperative te —
FromProto-Athabaskan *tuˑ .
te
water FromMiddle Dutch te , fromOld Dutch te ,ti , fromProto-Germanic *ta .
te
too ( indicating excess ) Te veel is nooit goed! ―Too much is never good! Te gek! ―Far out! (literally, “Too crazy! ”)te
( modifying an infinitive verb ) to Er is ietste eten there is something to eat Het iste doen it is doable, it can be done locatedat ,in ,on Te Amsterdamin Amsterdam. En zo rijden wete paard and so we ride on horseback. Jersey Dutch:te Negerhollands:toe te
( archaic ) in idiom; a form of the definite articlede This preposition used to govern the dative case. It also fused with the dative forms of the definite article:
( at, in ) : ter = te +der for feminine singular.( at, in ) : ten = te +den in all other cases.Combinations with the nominative form of the article, like *te het or *te de have never become part of the language. The collapse of the inflection system and the related demise of the distinction between masculine and feminine gender (for most speakers) has pushed this preposition into partial disuse. It does however occur in a fair number of idiomatic expressions, often with fossilized case endings, e.g.:
te elfder ure. ―at the eleventh hour te eigen bate ―for one's own profit (Elfder ,ure andbate are dative forms ofelfde ,uur andbaat respectively.)
FromProto-Finnic *tek .
te (short form of teie )
you ( plural and polite form ) te
paternal aunt yam te
under te
tocompact tocompress tosting toswell FromOld Galician-Portuguese te , fromLatin tē .
te
Second person singular dative and accusative pronoun ;you Takes the form-ti when suffixed to an impersonal verb form. Dialects: L Lagarteiru M Mañegu V Valverdeñu
Valeš, Miroslav (2021 )Diccionariu de A Fala: lagarteiru, mañegu, valverdeñu (web) [2] , 2nd edition, Minde, Portugal: CIDLeS, published2022 ,→ISBN te n (genitive singular tes , plural te )
The name of theLatin-script letterT /t . ( Latin-script letter names ) bókstavur ;a /fyrra a ,á ,be ,de ,edd ,e ,eff ,ge ,há ,i /fyrra i ,í /fyrra í ,jodd ,ká ,ell ,emm ,enn ,o ,ó ,pe ,err ,ess ,te ,u ,ú ,ve ,seinna i ,seinna í ,seinna a ,ø Originally fromHokkien 茶 ( tê ) , fromMiddle Chinese , fromOld Chinese , ultimately fromProto-Sino-Tibetan *s-la ( “ leaf, tea ” ) .
te n (genitive singular tes ,uncountable )
tea FromProto-Finnic *tek , fromProto-Uralic *te . The word is inflected as plural, but there is no plural marker in the nominative, except in dialects (tet ).
te
( personal ) you ( second-person plural; when addressing many persons or when addressing politely or formally one person ) Depending on the context, the pronoun can sometimes be omitted in written language if the text remains fluent – the pronoun is in spoken language practically always used (compare the usage ofsinä ( “ yousg ” ) ). When addressing one person politely or formally, it is recommended to capitalize the pronoun in writing:Te . When addressing only one person (even politely), the active past participle must be in thesingular in the compound forms that use it (e.g. negative, perfect, pluperfect forms):Te etteollut täällä silloin.( negative past indicative ) ―You were not here at that time.Te oletteollut täällä silloin.( affirmative present perfect indicative ) ―You havebeen here at that time.Te ette oleollut täällä silloin.( negative present perfect indicative ) ―You have notbeen here at that time.Te olisitteollut täällä silloin.( affirmative present perfect conditional ) ―You would havebeen here at that time.Te ette olisiollut täällä silloin.( negative present perfect conditional ) ―You would have notbeen here at that time.Te lienetteollut täällä silloin.( affirmative present perfect potential ) ―You have probablybeen here at that time.Te ette lieneollut täällä silloin.( negative present perfect potential ) ―You haven't probablybeen here at that time.Te olitteollut täällä silloin.( affirmative past perfect indicative ) ―You hadbeen here at that time.Te ette ollutollut täällä silloin.( negative past perfect indicative; note the duplicateollut ) ―You had notbeen here at that time. Irregular (inflectional stemtei- , as if in the plural). Thecomitative andinstructive forms don't exist; theabessive is hardly used. In addition to the standard set of cases,te and other personal pronouns have a specificaccusative form,teidät . Seethis appendix for information on the dialectal variants ofte . Finnish personal pronouns
Inherited fromLatin tū .
te (prevocalic t' ,postpositive -tu )( ORB, broad )
you ( second-person singular nominative ) Franco-Provençal personal pronouns
singular nominative accusative dative tonic1 possessive2 1st person jo mè min 2nd person te tè tin 3rd person masculine il lo /le lui sin 3rd person feminine el la lyé 3rd person neuter o y — 3rd person reflexive — sè plural nominative accusative dative tonic1 possessive2 1st person nos noutro 2nd person vos voutro 3rd person masculine ils los /les lor lor 3rd person feminine els les lor /lyés 3rd person reflexive — sè 1 Disjunctive or object of a preposition.2 Generally preceded by a definite article.
tu in DicoFranPro:Dictionnaire Français/Francoprovençal – ondicofranpro.llm.umontreal.ca te in Lo trèsor Arpitan – onarpitan.eu FromMiddle French te , fromOld French te , fromLatin tē , (accusative oftū ), fromProto-Indo-European *twé ,*te , accusative of*túh₂ ( “ you ” ) .
te
( direct object ) you Ilte cite souvent. ―He often quotes you. ( indirect object ) you Ilte donne le livre. ―He gives you the book. ( reflexive pronoun ) yourself Tute souviens d’elle. ―You remember her. (literally, “You remind yourself of her. ”)1 On can also function as a first person plural (although agreeing with third person singular verb forms).2 Vous is also used as the polite singular form.3 Ils andeux are also used when a group has a mixture of masculine and feminine members.4 These forms are also used as third person plural reflexive.
te f (plural tes )
The name of theLatin-script letterT /t . See the etymology of the correspondinglemma form.
te
inflection ofti : accusative reflexive FromFrench été ( “ been ” ) .
te
Indicates the past or pluperfect tense .FromFrench thé ( “ tea ” ) , fromHokkien 茶 ( tê ) .
te
tea te
Niʻihau form ofke ( “ the ” ) From the sameProto-Uralic root*tinä as e.g.Finnish sinä ,Erzya тон ( ton ) ,[ 1] Eastern Mari тый ( tyj ) andKomi-Zyrian тэ ( te ) .
te
( personal ) you ( second-person singular, nominative, informal form ) Note: In all these forms,te is optional and only serves for emphasis.
( [informal, singular] you ) : te inBárczi, Géza andLászló Országh .A magyar nyelv értelmező szótára (“The Explanatory Dictionary of the Hungarian Language”, abbr.:ÉrtSz. ). Budapest: Akadémiai Kiadó, 1959–1962. Fifth ed., 1992:→ISBN ( [dialectal] stressing the plural addressee ) : te inBárczi, Géza andLászló Országh .A magyar nyelv értelmező szótára (“The Explanatory Dictionary of the Hungarian Language”, abbr.:ÉrtSz. ). Budapest: Akadémiai Kiadó, 1959–1962. Fifth ed., 1992:→ISBN te ( Wiesemann spelling )
Alternative spelling ofde Borrowed fromHokkien 茶 ( tê ) (Amoy dialect ).
te n (genitive singular tes ,no plural )
tea Fromt +-e .
te (plural te-i )
The name of theLatin script letterT /t . FromDutch tee .
tè (plural te -te )
The name of theLatin-script letterT /t . ( Latin-script letter names ) huruf ;a ,be ,ce ,de ,e ,ef ,ge ,ha ,i ,je ,ka ,el ,em ,en ,o ,pe ,ki ,er ,es ,te ,u ,ve ,we ,eks ,ye ,zet FromOld Irish té ( “ hot ” ) .[ 1]
te (genitive singular masculine te ,genitive singular feminine te ,plural teo ,comparative teo or teocha )
hot ,warm pungent ardent ,hot-tempered ;vehement ,hotfoot affectionate comfortable ( of circumstances ) 1 When the preceding noun is lenited and governed by the definite article.2 When the preceding noun ends in a slender consonant.
Note: Certain mutated forms of some words can never occur in standard Modern Irish. All possible mutated forms are displayed for convenience.
^ Gregory Toner, Sharon Arbuthnot, Máire Ní Mhaonaigh, Marie-Luise Theuerkauf, Dagmar Wodtko, editors (2019 ), “té, te ”, ineDIL: Electronic Dictionary of the Irish Language ^ Sjoestedt, M. L. (1931 )Phonétique d’un parler irlandais de Kerry [Phonetics of an Irish Dialect of Kerry ] (in French), Paris: Librairie Ernest Leroux,§ 108 , page59 ^ Quiggin, E. C. (1906 )A Dialect of Donegal , Cambridge University Press,§ 388 , page129 FromLatin tē , fromtū .
te
( disjunctive, emphatic ) you te
( clitic ) Alternative form ofti Used when followed by a third-person direct object clitic (lo ,la ,li ,le , orne ). Italian personal pronouns
Number Person Gender Nominative Reflexive Accusative Dative Combined Disjunctive Locative Partitive Singular first — io mi ,m' ,-mi me me — second — tu ti ,t' ,-ti te te third m lui si 2 ,s' ,-si lo ,l' ,-lo gli ,-gli glie ,se 2 lui ,sé ci ,c' ,vi ,v' ( formal ) ne ,n' f lei ,Lei 1 la ,La 1 ,l' ,L' 1 ,-la ,-La 1 le 3 ,Le 1 ,-le 3 ,-Le 1 lei ,Lei 1 ,sé Plural first — noi ci ,c' ,-ci ce noi — second — voi ,Voi 4 vi ,Vi 4 ,v' ,V' 4 ,-vi ,-Vi 4 ve voi ,Voi 4 third m loro ,Loro 1 si ,s' ,-si li ,Li 1 ,-li ,-Li 1 gli ,-gli ,loro ( formal ) ,Loro 1 glie ,se loro ,Loro 1 ,sé ci ,c' ,vi ,v' ( formal ) ne ,n' f le ,Le 1 ,-le ,-Le 1 1 Third person pronominal forms used as formal terms of address to refer to second person subjects (with the first letter frequently capitalised as a sign of respect, and to distinguish them from third person subjects). Unlike the singular forms, the plural forms are mostly antiquated terms of formal address in the modern language, and second person plural pronouns are almost always used instead. 2 Also used as indefinite pronoun meaning “one”, and to form the passive. 3 Often replaced bygli ,-gli in informal language. 4 Formal (capitalisation optional); in many regions, can refer to just one person (compare with Frenchvous ).
te
Thehiragana syllableて ( te ) or thekatakana syllableテ ( te ) inHepburn romanization. FromSanskrit तद् ( tád ) , fromProto-Indo-European *tód .
te
they ,them ( absent from speaker ) ( 3rd-person plural personal pronoun ) Cognate withSindhi تي ( te ) ,Punjabi 'ਤੇ ( 'te ) .
te
to Rezaei, Tahereh (2020 )First notes on the syntax of Kholosi as a heritage language in the south of Iran [4] , Hormozgan Cultural Heritage, Handcrafts & Tourism Organization Hinde (1904) recordskute as an equivalent of Englishthrow in the “Jogowini dialect” of Kikuyu.[ 1]
te (infinitive gũte )
tothrow away tũ te ag a ―we (usually)throw away te
in ,into (Thisetymology is missing or incomplete. Please add to it, or discuss it at theEtymology scriptorium .)
tē f (indeclinable )
The name of theLatin-script letterT /t . (Latin-script letter names )littera ;ā ,bē ,cē ,dē ,ē ,ef ,gē ,hā /*acca ,ī ,kā ,el ,em ,en ,ō ,pē ,kū ,er ,es ,tē ,ū ,ix /īx /ex ,ȳ /ī graeca /ȳpsīlon ,zēta te inCharlton T. Lewis and Charles Short (1879 )A Latin Dictionary , Oxford: Clarendon Press te inCharlton T. Lewis (1891 )An Elementary Latin Dictionary , New York: Harper & Brothers te inGaffiot, Félix (1934 )Dictionnaire illustré latin-français , Hachette. Arthur E. Gordon,The Letter Names of the Latin Alphabet (University of California Press , 1973; volume 9 ofUniversity of California Publications: Classical Studies ), part III: “Summary of the Ancient Evidence”, page 32: "Clearly there is no question or doubt about the names of the vowels A, E, I, O, U. They are simply long A, long E, etc. (ā, ē, ī, ō, ū). Nor is there any uncertainty with respect to the six mutes B, C, D, G, P, T. Their names are bē, cē, dē, gē, pē, tē (each with a long E). Or about H, K, and Q: they are hā, kā, kū—each, again, with a long vowel sound." FromProto-Indo-European *twé ,*te , accusative of*túh₂ ( “ you ” ) .
tē
accusative / ablative singular oftū te
here te
now ...,now ...te šur,te tur ―now here,now thereCognate withLatvian te . The interjection is identical toAncient Greek τῆ ( tê ,“ here!, take this! ” ) , which Beekes derives fromProto-Indo-European *teh₁ , theinstrumental neuter singular form of*tód .[ 1] CompareGothic 𐌱𐌹𐌸𐌴 ( biþē ,“ while ” ) ,𐌳𐌿𐌸𐌴 ( duþē ,“ therefore ” ) ,Tocharian A ca- ,Tocharian B ce ( “ demonstrative pronoun ” ) <*tē ,[ 2] and possiblyOld Armenian թէ ( tʻē ,“ that ” ) .
IPA (key ) : /tʲɛ/
tè
( with third person ) may ,let ( used to indicate theoptative mood ) Ši̇̀ nakti̇̀s tè niẽkad nesibai̇̃gia . -May this night never end.tè
( with object cases ) here you go ,take this ( when giving something to someone ) Tè táu pinigų̃ –pir̃k tù sáu laũko kókį sklypẽlį . ―Here, have some money, go buy yourself a piece of land. ^ Beekes, Robert S. P. (2010 )Etymological Dictionary of Greek (Leiden Indo-European Etymological Dictionary Series;10 ), with the assistance of Lucien van Beek, Leiden, Boston: Brill,→ISBN ^ Albert J. van Windekens (1979 )Le tokharien confronté avec les autres langues indoeuropéennes. Vol. I. La phonétique et le vocabulaire . Louvain, page 249 te
nominative / accusative plural often Borrowed fromItalian tè .
te m (plural tejiet )
tea te
Romanization ofᡨᡝ te (te5 / te0 ,Zhuyin ˙ㄊㄜ )
Hanyu Pinyin reading of脦 te
Nonstandard spelling oftē .Nonstandard spelling oftè .Nonstandard spelling oftê̄ .Transcriptions of Mandarin into the Latin script often do not distinguish between the criticaltonal differences employed in the Mandarin language, using words such as this one without indication of tone.(Thisetymology is missing or incomplete. Please add to it, or discuss it at theEtymology scriptorium .)
CompareHawaiian ka ( “ the ” ) .False cognate ofEnglish the , but might have been reinforced by it.
te sg (plural ngā )
the 2006 , Joanne Barker,Sovereignty Matters ,page208 :Kote reote mauri ote mana Maori. The language isthe life principle of Maori manate sg (plural ngā )
Referring to a whole class of things or people designated by the noun that follows. Kī tonute wharenui i te tamariki. The meeting house was full of children. Mr ,mister ,sir ( capitalised ) KeiTe Wharehuia, tēnei te mihi atu mō tō āwhina mai. Wharehuiasir , thank you most sincerely for your help. Used in front of another verb following a stative. Kua oti i a au tāku pukapukate tuhi. I have finished writing my book. Used in front of another verb followingtaea . Ka taea e ia tēnei waiatate whakamāori. She will be able to interpret this song. Used before the names for the days of the week. Āte Rātapu mātou haere ai ki Poihākena. We go to Sydney on Saturday. Sometimes used before numbers with a following noun. I tāwāhi a Pita mōte rima tau. Peter was overseas for five years. Used before ordinal numbers including those usingtua- . I piki a Tāne-nui-a-rangi kite tuangahuru mā rua o ngā rangi. Tāne-nui-a-rangi climbed to the twelfth realm. he (for "a/an" and "some")“te ” in John C. Moorfield, Te Aka: Maori–English, English–Maori Dictionary and Index , 3rd edition, Longman/Pearson Education New Zealand, 2011,→ISBN . te
mouth door FromOld Dutch te , fromProto-Germanic *ta .
te
at ,in ( a place ) to ,towards at,during ( a time ) for ( the purpose of ) in accordance with with ,from ( a means, such as language ) ( with gerund ) to, forte
very ,particularly too , to an excessive degree“te (I) ”, inVroegmiddelnederlands Woordenboek ,2000 “te (II) ”, inVroegmiddelnederlands Woordenboek ,2000 Verwijs, E. ,Verdam, J. (1885–1929 ) “te (I) ”, inMiddelnederlandsch Woordenboek , The Hague: Martinus Nijhoff,→ISBN , page IVerwijs, E. ,Verdam, J. (1885–1929 ) “te (II) ”, inMiddelnederlandsch Woordenboek , The Hague: Martinus Nijhoff,→ISBN , page IIte
Alternative form ofþe ( “ thee ” ) FromOld French te .
te
you ,second-person singular object pronoun to you,second-person singular indirect object pronoun ( second-person singular object and indirect object pronoun ) : toy ( with verbs in the imperative ) ( second-person singular object and indirect object pronoun ) : vous ( used as a mark of formality or respect ) te
used withiah to negate a sentence FromLatin tē .
te
you (singular familiar, accusative or dative or reflexive or prepositional)Neapolitan personal pronouns nominative accusative dative reflexive possessive prepositional singular first person io (i' )me mìo ,mìa ,mieje ,meje me ,méne second person familiar tu te tùjo ,tòja ,tùoje ,tòje te ,téne formal vuje ve vuósto ,vósta ,vuóste ,vóste vuje third person m ìsso 'o ,'u (lo ,lu )'i ,'e (li ,le )se sùjo ,sòja ,sùoje ,sòje ìsso f éssa 'a (la )'e (le )éssa plural first person nuje ce nuósto ,nòsta ,nuóste ,nòste nuje second person vuje ve vuósto ,vòsta ,vuóste ,vòste vuje third person m ìsse 'i ,'e (li ,le )llòro se llòro (invariable )llòro f llòro 'e (le )
FromDutch thee .
te m (definite singular teen )
tea FromOld Norse tjá .
te (imperative te ,present tense ter ,passive tes ,simple past tedde ,past participle tedd ,present participle teende )
( reflexive ) tobehave “te” inThe Bokmål Dictionary .FromDutch thee .
te m (definite singular teen )
tea FromOld Norse tjá .
te (present tense ter ,past tense tedde ,past participle tedd ortett ,passive infinitive teast ,present participle teande ,imperative te )
( reflexive ) tobehave FromOld Norse til .
te
( dialectal , Trøndelag dialect , Østlandet) Alternative form oftil “te” inThe Nynorsk Dictionary .te f (plural tes )
tee ( the letter t, T ) FromProto-Germanic *ta ( “ to ” ) .
te
to Heomte cwæþ ( He saidto him ) Mt. Kmbl. Rush. 26, 21. Ālēfedte habbanne ( Allowedto have ) Swt. 445, 30: 50. FromLatin tē .
te
you (second-person singular direct object pronoun)toyou (second-person singular indirect object pronoun) yourself (second-person singular direct object reflexive pronoun)to yourself (second-person singular indirect object reflexive pronoun) Alternative scripts
𑀢𑁂 ( Brahmi script ) ते ( Devanagari script ) তে ( Bengali script ) තෙ ( Sinhalese script ) တေ ( Burmese script ) เต ( Thai script ) ᨲᩮ ( Tai Tham script ) ເຕ ( Lao script ) តេ ( Khmer script ) 𑄖𑄬 ( Chakma script ) te
masculine nominative / accusative plural ofta ( “ that ” ) te
nominative / accusative plural ofta ( “ they ” ) instrumental / dative / genitive singular oftvaṃ ( “ you ” ) FromPortuguese até .
te
until ,till ,up to ,up until (Thisetymology is missing or incomplete. Please add to it, or discuss it at theEtymology scriptorium .)
té
just ,only ,however -té
naked te m
nonvirile nominative / accusative plural often te f
nominative / accusative plural ofta te n
nominative / accusative plural ofto FromOld Galician-Portuguese te , fromLatin tē (accusative oftū ), fromProto-Indo-European *twé ,*te , accusative of*túh₂ ( “ you ” ) .
te
( object pronoun ) you (singular)Vem comigo; levar-te -ei a casa. (formal) Vem comigo, voute levar pra casa. (informal) Come with me; I will take you home. particle of spontaneity, when it indicates that there was spontaneity in the action by its agent. Vais-te muito cedo. You are leaving too soon. For quotations using this term, seeCitations:te .
te (pl te mau )
the ( the definite article ) te
if FromLatin tē (accusative oftū ), fromProto-Indo-European *twé ,*te , accusative of*túh₂ ( “ you ” ) .
te (unstressed accusative and reflexive form of tu )
( direct object ) you ( reflexive pronoun ) yourself ( Rumantsch Grischun, Sutsilvan, Surmiran ) té ( Puter, Vallader ) tè te m
( Sursilvan ) tea te (Cyrillic spelling те )
ofyou (cliticgenitive singular oftȋ ( “ you ” ) ) you (cliticaccusative singular oftȋ ( “ you ” ) )feminine nominative plural oftaj :those (=one )Tko sute žene? ―Who are those women? FromProto-Slavic *ta . CompareUkrainian та ( ta ) .
te (Cyrillic spelling те )
and (following a cause; lit.and thereby ,and thus )Poskliznuo sam sete pao. I slippedand fell. and ,and then (before the last thing in order of mention or occurrence)U posljednjih godinu dana bio sam u Beogradu, Zagrebu, Sarajevute Podgorici. In the past year, I have been to Belgrade, Zagreb, Sarajevoand Podgorica. Obukao sam se, izašao iz kuće, zaključao vratate otišao na posao. I got dressed up, got out of the house, locked the doorand then went to work. ( Croatia ) now (chiefly used in stock phrases)Problemi gdje god pogledaš!Te tu,te tamo! Problems, wherever you look!Now here,now there! Borrowed fromFrench thé , fromDutch thee , fromHokkien 茶 ( tê ) .
IPA (key ) : /tɛ/ ( Standard ) Hyphenation:te te m
tea te f (plural tes )
The name of theLatin-script letterT /t . FromLatin tē (accusative oftū ), fromProto-Indo-European *twé ,*te , accusative of*túh₂ ( “ you ” ) .
te
dative oftú : to you, for youTe voy a hacertus calzones...."La Cucaracha"
I’m going to makeyour britches accusative oftú : you( reflexive pronoun ) yourself Spanish personal pronouns
Not used withcon ;conmigo ,contigo , andconsigo are used instead, respectively Like other masculine Spanish words, masculine Spanish pronouns can be used when the gender of the subject is unknown or when the subject is plural and of mixed gender. Treated as if it were third-person for purposes of conjugation and reflexivity Ifle orles precedeslo ,la ,los , orlas in a clause, it is replaced withse (e.g.,Se lo dije instead ofLe lo dije ) Depending on the implicit gender of the object being referred to Used primarily in Spain Used only in rare circumstances FromEnglish then .
te
when 1984 , “Nioni”, inTelefôn' mi koe mi koenoe , performed byThe Exmo Stars andBoogie :Te yu no man fu tyari akata / yu no mu trobi matukuIf you aren't able to carry a headpad / you shouldn't bother with a basketFromEnglish till orDutch te .
te
until Borrowed fromDutch thee .
te
tea → Aukan:te → Saramaccan:té te
Romanization of𒋼 en koppte [a cup oftea ] From eitherFrench thé orGerman Tee , ultimately fromHokkien 茶 ( tê ) .
te n
tea ( the tree, its dried leaves and the drink made from them ) dricka en koppte drink a cup oftea Låtteet dra i fyra minuter Letthe tea steep for four minutes FromOld Swedish tēa , fromOld Norse tjá , fromProto-Germanic *tīhaną , fromProto-Indo-European *deyḱ- . Cognate ofGothic 𐌲𐌰𐍄𐌴𐌹𐌷𐌰𐌽 ( gateihan ) ,German zeihen ,Dutch tijgen .
te (present ter ,preterite tedde ,supine tett ,imperative te )
( reflexive ) toappear Och gräshoppornatedde sig såsom hästar, rustade till strid. And the shapes of the locusts [were] like unto horses prepared unto battle (Revelations 9:7) Conjugation ofte (weak) active passive infinitive te — supine tett — imperative te — imper. plural 1 ten — present past present past indicative ter tedde — — ind. plural 1 te tedde — — subjunctive 2 te tedde — — present participle teende past participle —
Eye dialect spelling oftill , for some dialects.
te
Synonym oftill Rarely in written form unless imitating speech.
te (Baybayin spelling ᜆᜒ )( colloquial )
Clipping ofate .Borrowed fromSpanish te , the Spanish name of the letterT /t .
te (Baybayin spelling ᜆᜒ )( historical )
the name of theLatin-script letterT /t , in theAbecedario Synonyms: ( in the Filipino alphabet ) ti ,( in the Abakada alphabet ) ta “te ”, inPambansang Diksiyonaryo | Diksiyonaryo.ph , Manila,2018 te (plural sometimes te mau )
the (singular) (definite article)the (plural) (definite article)(conversationally) a ,an (indefinite article)FromProto-Polynesian *te . Cognates includeHawaiian ke andSamoan le .
te
Singular definite article ;the Tokelauan articles impersonal singular plural definite te nā indefinite he ni personal nominal pronominal simple ia afteri /ki a a te aftermai ia te
R. Simona, editor (1986 ),Tokelau Dictionary [5] , Auckland: Office of Tokelau Affairs, page379 te
the (definite article)te
The name of theLatin-script letterT /t . ( Latin-script letter names ) harf ;a ,be ,ce ,çe ,de ,e ,fe ,ge ,yumuşak ge ,he ,ı ,i ,je ,ke ,le ,me ,ne ,o ,ö ,pe ,re ,se ,şe ,te ,u ,ü ,ve ,ye ,ze te
Letter of the Arabic alphabet:ت te
Alternative form ofta te (definite accusative [please provide] ,plural [please provide] )
The name of theLatin-script letterT /t . te
the (definite article)FromProto-Finnic *tee .
te
road ,way Zajceva, N. G., Mullonen, M. I. (2007 ) “дорога ,трасса ”, inUz’ venä-vepsläine vajehnik / Novyj russko-vepsskij slovarʹ [New Russian–Veps Dictionary ][6] , Petrozavodsk: Periodika te
only ,solely ,merely but Borrowed fromEnglish tea , fromDutch thee , fromHokkien 茶 ( tê ) , probably viaFrench thé orEnglish tea .
te m (uncountable )
( uncountable ) tea ( drink made with infusion ofCamellia sinensis or other leaves ) tea ( main evening meal ) Synonym: swper Note: Certain mutated forms of some words can never occur in standard Welsh. All possible mutated forms are displayed for convenience.
R. J. Thomas, G. A. Bevan, P. J. Donovan, A. Hawke et al., editors (1950–present), “te ”, inGeiriadur Prifysgol Cymru Online (in Welsh), University of Wales Centre for Advanced Welsh & Celtic Studies FromMalay teh , possibly throughTernate tee , fromHokkien 茶 ( tê ) (Amoy dialect ).
te
tea te
so ;so that Synonym: supaya Clemens Voorhoeve (1982 )The Makian languages and their neighbours [7] , Pacific linguistics FromProto-Hmong *tæwᶜ ( “ frost ” ) .[ 1]
Thisetymology is missing or incomplete. Please add to it, or discuss it at theEtymology scriptorium . Particularly: “Doesn't really resemble any other "frost" word in the area. There is a similarity toHungarian dér ( “ frost ” ) , which is generally cited by Magyarologists as being of unknown origin. It is worth noting that, in addition to frost being uncommon or even nonexistent in the regions where Hmong-Mien is spoken, the Hmongic term does not seem to exist in Mienic, and that Hmongic populations are distinguished from Mienics by a noticeable presence of a paternal lineage strongly associated with ancient northeastern Chinese and Uralic populations, the latter which Hungarian belongs to. Perhaps these two terms are linked, though the hypothetical timescale of the relationship makes this virtually impossible to verify.”
te ( classifier:cov )
frost Heimbach, Ernest E. (1979 )White Hmong — English Dictionary [8] , SEAP Publications,→ISBN , page312 . ^ Ratliff, Martha (2010 )Hmong-Mien language history (Studies in Language Change; 8), Camberra, Australia: Pacific Linguistics,→ISBN , page283 .te
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