advento

See also: Advento

Esperanto

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /adˈvento/
  • Audio:(file)
  • Rhymes: -ento
  • Hyphenation: ad‧ven‧to

Noun

advento (accusative singular adventon, plural adventoj, accusative plural adventojn)

  1. advent

Galician

Etymology

Learned borrowing from Latin adventus (approach). The inherited form avento has fallen out of use.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /adˈbento̝/
  • IPA(key): /adˈbɛnto̝/

Noun

advento m (plural adventos)

  1. Advent (season before Christmas)
    • 1370, Miguel Romaní Martínez (ed.), La colección diplomática de Santa María de Oseira (1025-1310). Santiago: Tórculo Edicións, II, page 318:
      Et que os clerigos da dita iglesia que me digan cada anno huna minsa cantada pollo mes de avento
      And the clerics of the aforementioned church shall say a chanted mass, each year, sometime during the month of Advent
    Pola vintena do advento, chuvia, neve e vento.
    By the twenties of Advent, rain, snow and wind.
    (proverb)

References

Further reading

Ido

Etymology

Borrowed from Esperanto adventoLatin adventusEnglish adventFrench aventGerman AdventItalian avventoRussian адве́нт (advént)Spanish adviento.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /adˈvento/

Noun

advento (plural adventi)

  1. (Christianity) advent

Further reading

  • advento in Ido-English Dictionary by L.H. Dyer, 1924

Interlingua

Noun

advento (uncountable)

  1. arrival, advent

Latin

Etymology

From adveniō (arrive) +‎ -tō.

Pronunciation

Verb

adventō (present infinitive adventāre, perfect active adventāvī, supine adventātum); first conjugation, no passive

  1. (intransitive) to come continually nearer to a point, approach, arrive at, press forward, march on, come to, draw near

Conjugation

Descendants

  • Italian: avventare
  • Sicilian: abbintari

References

  • advento”, in Charlton T. Lewis and Charles Short (1879) A Latin Dictionary, Oxford: Clarendon Press
  • advento”, in Charlton T. Lewis (1891) An Elementary Latin Dictionary, New York: Harper & Brothers
  • advento in Gaffiot, Félix (1934) Dictionnaire illustré latin-français, Hachette.

Portuguese

Etymology

Borrowed from Latin adventus.

Pronunciation

 
  • (Brazil) IPA(key): /a.d͡ʒiˈvẽ.tu/, /ad͡ʒˈvẽ.tu/
    • (Southern Brazil) IPA(key): /ad͡ʒˈvẽ.to/, /a.d͡ʒiˈvẽ.to/
 

  • Rhymes: -ẽtu
  • Hyphenation: ad‧ven‧to

Noun

advento m (plural adventos)

  1. (formal) advent; coming; arrival
    Synonyms: (more informal) chegada, (more informal) vinda

Further reading