av 
( international standards ) ISO 639-1 language code  forAvar . av 
Abbreviation  ofaverage Abbreviation  ofaudiovisual av 
Abbreviation  ofad valorem av  (countable  anduncountable plural avs 
Abbreviation  ofavenue Abbreviation  ofavoirdupois Abbreviation  ofantivirus Abbreviation  ofaviation av 
( text messaging ) have av u got d@?  — have you got that?“av”, inThe American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language Houghton Mifflin ,2000 ,→ISBN  “av ”, inDictionary.com Unabridged ,Dictionary.com, LLC , 1995–present. av 
abbreviation  ofaudiovisuel av 
ouch  (expression of one's own physical pain)FromOld Norse af Proto-Germanic *ab Proto-Indo-European *apó *h₂epó 
av dative )
by ,from ,off ,of , on account ofav 
abbreviation  ofalustava varaus ( “ initial reservation, provisional reservation ” ) av 
( in compounds ) abbreviation  ofaudiovisuaalinen ( “ audiovisual ” ) av  f 
alternative form ofav.  Derived  fromEnglish have 
av 
has ,have FromProto-Turkic *āg 
av 
net N. A. Baskakov, S.M. Šapšala, editor (1973 ), “av ”, inKaraimsko-Russko-Polʹskij Slovarʹ  [Karaim-Russian-Polish Dictionary →ISBN  FromProto-Iranian *Hā́fš Proto-Indo-Iranian *Hā́ps Proto-Indo-European *h₂ep- Persian آب ( âb ) ,Baluchi آپ ( áp ) ,Bakhtiari او ( aw ) ,Pashto اوبه Avestan 𐬀𐬞 ( ap ) ,Sanskrit अप् ( áp ) .
av  f Arabic spelling ئاڤ 
water stream ,river Synonyms: çem ro rûbar şet Chyet, Michael L.  (2020 ), “asêgeh ”, inFerhenga Birûskî: Kurmanji–English Dictionary  (Language Series; 1), volume 1, London: Transnational Press,page14  FromOld Norse af ( “ of, from, off, by ” ) , fromProto-Germanic *ab ( “ away from ” ) , fromProto-Indo-European *h₂epó ( “ off, away ” ) .
av 
off ( not operating ) å slåav  to turn off off ( so as to be removed or separated ) åbite av  to bite off ( colloquial ) onwards fra barndomav  from childhood on of bliav  med get rid of now av  og tilnow and then av 
from by  (in construction of the passive tense)Huset ble maltav  ham. The house was painted by him. of for in ,out of on FromOld Norse af English of English off 
av 
off ; not operatingSlåav  ljoset. Turn the lightsoff . from of av 
of Det er lagaav  bly. It is madeof  lead. by  (in construction of the passive voice)Huset vart målaav  honom. The house was paintedby  him. from Eg lånte ei bokav  han. I borrowed a bookfrom  him. for in ,out of on “av”  inThe Nynorsk Dictionary .av 
abbreviation  ofavenida FromOld Norse af Proto-Germanic *ab 
av 
from Jagfick  denav  Tomas. I got itfrom  Tomas. (Tomas gave it to me.) by  (in construction of thepassive voice ).Huset måladesav  honom. The house was paintedby  him. of ; denoting the material of which something is madeBordet ärav  trä. The table is (made)of  wood. of ; denoting a partEnav  dem sjunger. Oneof  them is singing. av  (absolute, never inflected, only in predicative position )
abbreviation  ofavstängd shut down ,turned off )Radion ärav . The radio receiver is turned off. broken ,off ; which has snapped offKäppen  ärav .The cane is broken. av notcomparable  )
( verb particle ) denoting something which stops, ceases, or breaks off ( verb particle ) denoting something which is moved from an original place, or originates somewhere ( verb particle ) denoting an action of copying, or creation of something similar to an existing template av  (Cyrillic ав 
cloud Pirejko, L. A. (1976 ), “ав ”, inTalyšsko-russkij slovarʹ  [Talysh–Russian Dictionary 20  FromOttoman Turkish آو ( av ) , fromProto-Turkic *āb ( “ hunt, chase ” ) .
av  (definite accusative avı plural avlar 
hunting hunt prey av 
alternative form ofov ( “ of ” )  Jacob Poole (d. 1827) (before 1828), William Barnes, editor,A Glossary, With some Pieces of Verse, of the old Dialect of the English Colony in the Baronies of Forth and Bargy, County of Wexford, Ireland , London: J. Russell Smith, published1867 ,page22