Borrowed fromLatin pater ( “ father ” ) .Doublet ofayr ,faeder ,father ,padre , and père .
pater (plural paters )
( formal or humorous ) Father .Coordinate term: mater 1900 , Harry B. Norris, “Burlington Bertie”:Burlington Bertie's the latest young jay He rents a swell flat somewhere Kensington way He spends the good oof that hispater has made Along with the Brandy and Soda Brigade.
1923 ,Warwick Deeping ,The Secret Sanctuary [1] , e-artnow, published2021 :Thepater is the kindest-hearted old soul, but there are times when he hates me. I'm a thing which every decent middle-class person hates, a problem, like the unemployed, you know, or the ex-soldier. We are always in such a hurry to forget uncomfortable things, and I'm an uncomfortable thing. Poor old dad; he gets me at breakfast; he gets me in the morning paper.
Peart ,Petra ,apert ,apter ,parte ,peart ,petar ,petra ,prate ,preta ,reapt ,repat ,retap ,taper ,trape ,treap pater
genitive plural ofpatro FromMiddle Dutch pater , fromLatin pater , fromProto-Italic *patēr , fromProto-Indo-European *ph₂tḗr .Doublet ofvader andva .
pater m (plural paters ,diminutive patertje n )
( Roman Catholicism ) father ( as a religious title ) FromDutch pater , fromLatin pater , fromProto-Italic *patēr , fromProto-Indo-European *ph₂tḗr .
patêr (plural pater -pater )
( Catholicism ) priest Synonyms: pastor ,rama Latin Kinship Terms for Extended Families pater
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FromProto-Italic *patēr , fromProto-Indo-European *ph₂tḗr . As a titular suffix, shares cognate roots withOld Latin Diēspiter ( “ Father Jove ” ) ,Latin Iuppiter ( “ Jupiter ” ) .
pater m (genitive patris ) ;third declension
father (male parent )head of household parent forefather priest honorific title Third-declension noun.
Italo-Romance: Western Romance:Gallo-Italic: Gallo-Romance: Ibero-Romance:Old Leonese: Old Galician-Portuguese:padre Galician:padre Portuguese:padre (see there for further descendants ) ⇒ Old Galician-Portuguese:pay Galician:pai Portuguese:pai (see there for further descendants ) Old Spanish:padre Occitano-Romance: Rhaeto-Romance: → Dutch:pater → English:pater → Romanian:pater → Welsh:pader “pater ”, inCharlton T. Lewis and Charles Short (1879 ),A Latin Dictionary , Oxford: Clarendon Press “pater ”, inCharlton T. Lewis (1891 ),An Elementary Latin Dictionary , New York: Harper & Brothers “pater ”, inGaffiot, Félix (1934 ),Dictionnaire illustré latin-français , Hachette. Carl Meißner; Henry William Auden (1894 ),Latin Phrase-Book [2] , London:Macmillan and Co. in our fathers' time:memoria patrum nostrorum son of such and such a father, mother:patre, (e) matre natus my dear father:pater optime orcarissime, mi pater (vid. sect. XII. 10) to be disinherited:exheredari a patre (ambiguous) to consult the senators on a matter:patres (senatum) consulere de aliqua re (Sall. Iug. 28)Borrowed fromLatin pater .
pater m
father (term of address for a Christian priest)FromEnglish pater (Christian priests are often referred to as 'Father'), fromLatin pater .
pater
priest