sabat
English edit
Etymology edit
Borrowed from Arabic سَابَاط (sābāṭ).
Noun edit
sabat (plural sabats)
- (architecture) A roofing structure with the street beneath it in Mediterranean and Middle Eastern architecture, serving to support buildings or to cool pedestrians by maximizing daytime shade and accelerating breezes.
Translations edit
See also edit
- Fina (architecture) on Wikipedia.Wikipedia
Anagrams edit
Bikol Central edit
Alternative forms edit
Pronunciation edit
Noun edit
sabát
- encounter
- act of rowing against the current
- act of standing up, facing up to someone
- Synonym: atubang
Derived terms edit
Cebuano edit
Pronunciation edit
Verb edit
sabát
- to respond, to reply or to repeat after someone leading a prayer
- to go to and join in a prayer or novena in a fiesta or wake
Derived terms edit
Czech edit
Pronunciation edit
Noun edit
sabat m inan
Declension edit
Further reading edit
Hiligaynon edit
Noun edit
sabát
Masbatenyo edit
Noun edit
sabát
Nzadi edit
Etymology edit
Ultimately from Portuguese sapato; compare Lingala sapáto.
Noun edit
sabât (plural sabât)
Further reading edit
- Crane, Thera, Larry Hyman, Simon Nsielanga Tukumu (2011) A grammar of Nzadi [B.865]: a Bantu language of the Democratic Republic of the Congo, Berkeley, CA: University of California Press, →ISBN
Polish edit
Etymology edit
Learned borrowing from Latin sabbatum. Doublet of sobota, szabas, and szabat.
Pronunciation edit
Noun edit
sabat m inan (related adjective sabatowy)
- (Christianity, Judaism or historical or occult) Alternative form of szabat
Declension edit
Declension of sabat
Further reading edit
Romanian edit
Etymology edit
Borrowed from French sabbat, from Latin sabbatum.
Noun edit
sabat n (plural sabaturi)
Declension edit
Declension of sabat
singular | plural | |||
---|---|---|---|---|
indefinite articulation | definite articulation | indefinite articulation | definite articulation | |
nominative/accusative | (un) sabat | sabatul | (niște) sabaturi | sabaturile |
genitive/dative | (unui) sabat | sabatului | (unor) sabaturi | sabaturilor |
vocative | sabatule | sabaturilor |
Serbo-Croatian edit
Noun edit
sàbat m (Cyrillic spelling са̀бат)
Declension edit
Tagalog edit
Etymology 1 edit
Pronunciation edit
Noun edit
sabat (Baybayin spelling ᜐᜊᜆ᜔)
Derived terms edit
Etymology 2 edit
Compare Cebuano sabat and Hiligaynon sabat.
Pronunciation edit
Noun edit
sabát (Baybayin spelling ᜐᜊᜆ᜔)
- butting in; meddling (into someone talking in a conversation)
- Synonym: sabad
- sudden interruption or cutting across someone's way
- unexpected answer; unwanted reply
- small wooden or metal pin, bar, or stick (used as a bolt for securing joints, gates, doors, windows, etc.)
- Synonym: klabiha
- dowel; peg or a piece of wood, etc., to fit into a corresponding hole on another piece of wood
- Synonym: mitsa