puse

See also: pusē, pusė, pusę, and puše

Albanian

Noun

puse

  1. indefinite nominative/accusative plural of pus

Czech

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): [ˈpusɛ]
  • Rhymes: -usɛ
  • Hyphenation: pu‧se

Noun

puse

  1. dative/locative singular of pusa

Anagrams

Hiri Motu

Noun

puse

  1. bag

Latin

Noun

pūse

  1. vocative singular of pūsus

Latvian

Noun

puse f (5th declension)

  1. half
  2. side

Declension

Declension of puse (5th declension)
singular plural
nominative puse puses
genitive puses pušu
dative pusei pusēm
accusative pusi puses
instrumental pusi pusēm
locative pusē pusēs
vocative puse puses

Derived terms

Romanian

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): [ˈpuse]

Verb

puse

  1. third-person singular simple perfect indicative of pune

Spanish

Etymology

From Old Spanish puse, from Vulgar Latin *pousi, through metathesis from Latin posuī.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /ˈpuse/ [ˈpu.se]
  • Rhymes: -use
  • Syllabification: pu‧se

Verb

puse

  1. first-person singular preterite indicative of poner

Sudovian

Etymology

From Proto-Balto-Slavic [Term?], from Proto-Indo-European *pewḱ-. Compare Lithuanian puši̇̀s, dialectal pùšė, Old Prussian peuse, however Latvian priẽde.[1][2]

Noun

puſe

  1. (botany) pine
    • “Pagan dialects from Narew” line 49, (copied by V. Zinov, 1983):
      sosnapuſe
      sosnapine

References

  1. ^ Zigmas Zinkevičius (1985) “Lenkų-jotvingių žodynėlis? [A Polish-Yotvingian dictionary?]”, in Baltistica, volume 21, number 1 (in Lithuanian), Vilnius: VU, →DOI, page 78:puſe ‘pušis, l. sosna’ 49.
  2. ^ pušìs” in Hock et al., Altlitauisches etymologisches Wörterbuch 2.0 (online, 2020–): “nar. puſe sf. ‘Kiefer’”.

Wolio

Etymology

From Proto-Malayo-Polynesian *pusəj.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /puse/

Noun

puse

  1. navel

References

  • Anceaux, Johannes C. (1987) Wolio Dictionary (Wolio-English-Indonesian) / Kamus Bahasa Wolio (Wolio-Inggeris-Indonesia), Dordrecht: Foris