Clipping ofEnglish Pol ish orPolish pol ski .
pol
( international standards ) ISO 639-2 &ISO 639-3 language code forPolish . Clipping ofpolitician .
pol (plural pols )
( informal ) Apolitician .1993 October 31, Maureen Dowd, “The WASP Descendancy”, inThe New York Times [1] ,→ISSN , archived fromthe original on24 January 2022 :Journalists andpols were cozier then. President Kennedy sipped 1945 Lafite-Rothschild at the Alsops' Georgetown home, and the Alsops dined at the White House.
2008 , Frank P. Vazzano,Politician Extraordinaire , page174 :The knights-errant of politics could "tsk, tsk" all they wanted, but most experiencedpols recognized that patronage was the lifeblood of their profession.
From a contraction of the prepositionpor ( “ for, by ” ) + masculine singular articleel ( “ the ” ) .
pol m (feminine pola ,neuter polo ,masculine plural polos ,feminine plural poles )
for the ,by theFromLatin polus .
pol m (plural pols )
pole elpol Sud ―the South Pole pol magnètic ―magnetic pole “pol ”, inDiccionari de la llengua catalana [Dictionary of the Catalan Language ] (in Catalan), second edition,Institute of Catalan Studies [Catalan:Institut d'Estudis Catalans ], April 2007 “pol ”, inGran Diccionari de la Llengua Catalana ,Grup Enciclopèdia Catalana ,2026 “pol” inDiccionari normatiu valencià ,Acadèmia Valenciana de la Llengua .“pol” inDiccionari català-valencià-balear , Antoni Maria Alcover and Francesc de Borja Moll, 1962.pol c (singular definite polen ,plural indefinite poler )
pole (the northern and southern ends of the earth's rotational axis;North Pole andSouth Pole )apole in geometry. pole of a magnet, negative or positive.FromMiddle Dutch pol .Thisetymology is incomplete. You can help Wiktionary by elaborating on the origins of this term.
pol m (plural pollen ,diminutive polletje n )
a bundle of plants, with the soil it stands on or that hangs from it ( Belgium ) ahand pol
by Esti libru hue escritupol Gabriel García Márquez. This book was writtenby Gabriel García Márquez. through for IPA (key ) : [ˈpɔl] Hyphenation:pol FromDutch vol , fromMiddle Dutch vol , fromOld Dutch fol ,ful , fromProto-Germanic *fullaz , fromProto-Indo-European *pl̥h₁nós .
pol (comparative lebih pol ,superlative paling pol )
( colloquial ) full Synonym: penuh ( colloquial ) maximum Synonym: maksimal FromEnglish poll orDutch poll , fromProto-Germanic *pullaz ( “ round object, head, top ” ) , fromProto-Indo-European *bolno- ,*bōwl- ( “ orb, round object, bubble ” ) , fromProto-Indo-European *bew- ( “ to blow, swell ” ) .
pol (plural pol -pol )
poll , a survey of a particular grouppol (plural pol -pol )
nonstandard form ofpul FromMiddle French pole , fromLatin polus , fromAncient Greek πόλος ( pólos ,“ axis of rotation ” ) .
pol m (genitive singular poil ,nominative plural poil )
( biology , electricity , geography , magnetism) pole Note: Certain mutated forms of some words can never occur in standard Modern Irish. All possible mutated forms are displayed for convenience.
Clipping ofPollux .
pol
byPollux !,truly !,really !c. 180BCE ,
Plautus ,
Casina 2.2.8–9 :
[Myrrhina] Etpol ego istuc ad te. Sed quid est, quod tuo nunc animo aegrest? Myrrhina] And,troth , I was coming here to yours. But what is it that now distresses your mind? “pol ”, inCharlton T. Lewis and Charles Short (1879 ),A Latin Dictionary , Oxford: Clarendon Press “pol ”, inCharlton T. Lewis (1891 ),An Elementary Latin Dictionary , New York: Harper & Brothers "pol ", in Charles du Fresne du Cange,Glossarium Mediæ et Infimæ Latinitatis (augmented edition with additions by D. P. Carpenterius, Adelungius and others, edited by Léopold Favre, 1883–1887) Carl Meißner; Henry William Auden (1894 ),Latin Phrase-Book [2] , London:Macmillan and Co. to hiss a play:fabulam exigere (Ter. Andr. Pol.) pol m (definite singular polen ,indefinite plural poler ,definite plural polene )
pole (the northern and southern ends of the earth's rotational axis;North Pole andSouth Pole )apole in geometry. pole of a magnet, negative or positive.“pol” inThe Bokmål Dictionary .FromAncient Greek πόλος ( pólos ,“ axis of rotation ” ) .
pol m (definite singular polen ,indefinite plural polar ,definite plural polane )
pole ( the northern and southern ends of the earth's rotational axis;North Pole andSouth Pole ) apole in geometry. pole of a magnet, negative or positive.Clipping ofvinmonopol , fromvin +monopol .
pol n (definite singular polet ,indefinite plural pol ,definite plural pola )
alcohol monopoly ( agovernment monopoly on manufacturing and/or retailing some or all alcoholic beverages ) theinstitution itself( of alcohol monopoly ) aretailer licensed (through the monopoly) tosell alcohol ; government ownedliquor store Unknown.[ 1] See alsopole .
pol m (definite singular polen ,uncountable )
a high ball caught by hand(s) before touching the groundSynonyms: hys ,lyr See the etymology of the correspondinglemma form.
pol
present tense ofpola and pole ^ “pol” inDet Norske Akademis ordbok (NAOB ).“pol” inThe Nynorsk Dictionary .WestProto-Germanic *pōlaz , of uncertain origin. Cognate withOld High German pfuol (German Pfuhl ).
pōl m
pool Stronga -stem:
Borrowed fromPolish płeć .
pol f
gender Majtán, Milan et al., editors (1991–2008 ), “pol ”, inHistorický slovník slovenského jazyka [Historical Dictionary of the Slovak Language ] (in Slovak), volumes 1–7 (A – Ž ), Bratislava: VEDA,→OCLC pol m (invariable )( Bassa Romagna )
chicken Borrowed fromAncient Greek πόλος ( pólos ) .
pȏl m inan (Cyrillic spelling по̑л )
pole (magnetic, positive, negative etc.)pȏl m inan (Cyrillic spelling по̑л )( Bosnia , Serbia )
sex ( kind of an organism as determined by its reproductive organs ) gender Frompȍla .
pȏl (Cyrillic spelling по̑л )
( Croatia ) half sat ipol ―an hour and a half tri ipol mjeseca ―three and a half months From a contraction of the prepositionpor ( “ for, by ” ) + masculine singular articleel ( “ the ” ) .
IPA (key ) : /ˈpol/ [ˈpol] Rhymes:-ol Syllabification:pol pol m (feminine pola ,neuter polo ,masculine plural polos ,feminine plural polas )
( archaic ) contraction ofpor andel pol c
apole , an extreme point, usuallymagnetically orgeographically , such as theNorth Pole orSouth Pole . a pole, the points of an electricalbattery between which the voltage arises. ( mathematics , theory for analytical functions) a point where aLaurent series is not defined.