alapa

See also: ʻālapa

English

Noun

alapa (plural alapas)

  1. Alternative form of alap.

Anagrams

Latin

Etymology

Of unknown origin.

Originally used by Romans to refer to the strike given from master to slave upon manumission as a final act of indignity. First attested in Phaedrus when the Empire was already greatly expanded, then in the Semitic loanword-ridden Juvenal and largely attested in the Christian writings, i. e. from the proponents of a Semitic religion.

Hence, probably from Aramaic אַלַּף (allap̄, to teach), and/or from Proto-Semitic *ʔallipa (to tame, to domesticate; to familiarize, to instruct, to put together, to join), related via the idea of an ox trained to Proto-Semitic *ʔalp- (ox, ox in a yoke).

Noun

alapa f (genitive alapae); first declension

  1. slap, smack (with the flat of the hand)

Declension

First-declension noun.

singular plural
nominative alapa alapae
genitive alapae alapārum
dative alapae alapīs
accusative alapam alapās
ablative alapā alapīs
vocative alapa alapae

Descendants

  • Aromanian: arpã, aripã
  • Calabrian: álipa
  • >? Catalan: àlep
  • French: aube
  • >? Galician: aba, labazada
  • Italian: lapazza
  • Megleno-Romanian: iaripă
  • Old Catalan: àlep
  • Portuguese: aba
  • Romanian: aripă
  • Sicilian: lapazza
  • Spanish: álabe
    • Basque: alabezki
  • Venetan: slèpa

References

Portuguese

Verb

alapa

  1. inflection of alapar:
    1. third-person singular present indicative
    2. second-person singular imperative

Yoruba

Etymology 1

From oní (the one/thing that has) +‎ apá (arm)

Alternative forms

  • الَپَ

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /ā.lá.k͡pá/

Noun

alápá

  1. something armed, with arms

Etymology 2

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /à.lá.k͡pà/

Noun

àlápà

  1. (Ijebu) melon cake

Etymology 3

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /à.lá.k͡pà/

Noun

àlápà

  1. (Ijebu) pepper soup