See also: maalé

Estonian edit

Noun edit

maale

  1. allative singular of maa

Hunsrik edit

Pronunciation edit

Verb edit

maale

  1. to paint

Derived terms edit

Verb edit

maale

  1. to grind, to mill

Further reading edit

Ladino edit

Alternative forms edit

Etymology edit

From Ottoman Turkish محله (mahalle), from Arabic محلَّة (maḥalla).

Pronunciation edit

Noun edit

maále f (Latin spelling)

  1. neighborhood, district
    • 2019, Şeli GAON, “Viyaje A Andalusia - 2”, in Şalom[1]:
      La maale de los djudyos se topa en el sentro de la sivdad vyeja, toda la kaleja golyendo al miskle de flores, las plasas kon las pisinas, los arvoles de portokales kon los kortijos finos avyertos para ke los turistos vijiten.
      The Jewish district is found in the center of the old city, the whole street smelling of a mixture of flowers, the plazas with the swimming pools, the orange trees with the fine open patios for the tourists to visit.

Limburgish edit

Alternative forms edit

Etymology edit

From Proto-West Germanic *malan, from Proto-Germanic *malaną.

Pronunciation edit

Verb edit

maale (third-person singular present méllt, preterite maalde or mool or muël, past participle gemaale)

  1. (intransitive, Eupen, Krefeld) to mill
  2. (transitive, same dialects) to grind

Usage notes edit

The preterite form mool is used in Krefeld, while muël is used in Eupen. Note that both of these forms are archaic and maalde is more common in both dialects.