opiat

See also: Opiat and opiát

Catalan

Etymology

From opi +‎ -at.

Pronunciation

Adjective

opiat (feminine opiada, masculine plural opiats, feminine plural opiades)

  1. (pharmacology) opiated (mixed or impregnated with opium)

Further reading

Danish

Etymology

From Medieval Latin opiata, from opiatus.

Noun

opiat n (singular definite opiatet, plural indefinite opiater)

  1. an opiate

Declension

Declension of opiat
neuter
gender
singular plural
indefinite definite indefinite definite
nominative opiat opiatet opiater opiaterne
genitive opiats opiatets opiaters opiaternes

References

Norwegian Bokmål

Etymology

From Medieval Latin opiata, from opiatus.

Noun

opiat n (definite singular opiatet, indefinite plural opiat or opiater, definite plural opiata or opiatene)

  1. an opiate

References

Norwegian Nynorsk

Etymology

From Medieval Latin opiata, from opiatus.

Noun

opiat n (definite singular opiatet, indefinite plural opiat, definite plural opiata)

  1. an opiate

References

Romanian

Etymology

Borrowed from French opiat.

Noun

opiat n (plural opiate)

  1. opiate

Declension

Declension of opiat
singular plural
indefinite definite indefinite definite
nominative-accusative opiat opiatul opiate opiatele
genitive-dative opiat opiatului opiate opiatelor
vocative opiatule opiatelor

Swedish

Etymology

From Medieval Latin opiata, from opiatus.

Noun

opiat c or n

  1. an opiate

Declension

References