a

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a U+0061, a
LATIN SMALL LETTER A
`
[U+0060]
Basic Latin b
[U+0062]
Some typefaces have a single-story form of a. This has a dedicated Unicode character ɑ for IPA use.

Translingual

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Etymology 1

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  Modification of capital A.

Pronunciation

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  • Pronunciation of IPA [aː]:(file)

Letter

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a (upper case A)

  1. The first letter of the basic modern Latin alphabet.
    (superscript) See ª.

Symbol

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a

  1. (IPA, phonetics) an open front or central unrounded vowel.
  2. (IPA, superscript ⟨ᵃ⟩) [a]-coloring or a weak, fleeting, epenthetic or echo [a].
  3. (international standards) transliterates Indic (or equivalent).

See also

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Further reading

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Etymology 2

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Abbreviation of atto-, from Danish atten (eighteen).

Symbol

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a

  1. atto-, prefix for 10-18 in the International System of Units.

Etymology 3

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From Latin annum or annus.

Symbol

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a

  1. Year as a unit of time, specifically a Julian year or 365.25 days.

Etymology 4

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Abbreviation of are, from French are.

Symbol

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a

  1. An are, a unit of area one hundredth of a hectare; ares.

Etymology 5

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Abbreviation of English acceleration.

Symbol

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a

  1. (physics) acceleration

Etymology 6

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(This etymology is missing or incomplete. Please add to it, or discuss it at the Etymology scriptorium. Particularly: “from annuity?”)

Symbol

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a

  1. (actuarial notation) Annuity; (specifically) annuity-immediate.
    ax:n̅|n-year annuity-immediate to a person currently age x
    axlife annuity-immediate to a person currently age x

Other representations of A:

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English

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Etymology 1

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The letter name is from Middle English ā, from Old French, ultimately from Latin ā. Use of the Latin letter in (Old) English displaced the futhorc letter (a) beginning in the 7th century, and partially also (æ).

Pronunciation

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Letter

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a (lowercase, uppercase A, plural as or a's)

  1. The first letter of the English alphabet, written in the Latin script.
    • 1917, John Wesley Young, Frank Millett Morgan, Elementary Mathematical Analysis, New York, N.Y.: The Macmillan Company, page 487:
      This expression is zero, for we have replaced the column of a's by the column of b's and hence the determinant has two columns identical.
    • 1926, George Kelly, Craig's Wife, Act I, page 5:
      Passmore. Capital P-a-double s-m-o-r-e.
    • 1974, Ervin A. Dennis, John D. Jenkins, “A Font of Type”, in Comprehensive Graphic Arts, Indianapolis, I.N.: Howard W. Sams & Co., Inc., →ISBN, page 26, column 2:
      Note that with 18-point type, fifteen capital A's, twenty-five lowercase a's, and twelve 1's are obtained with one font. With this information, it is possible to refer to Table 10-1 which gives the number of characters for each letter, punctuation mark, or figure.
    • 2013, Margaret McPhee, Mistress to the Marquis, Toronto, Ont.: Harlequin Historical, →ISBN, page 249:
      Across every sheet of paper were lines and lines of letters of the alphabet. A row of a's followed by a row of b's and so on, pages of them, like pages from a copy book, crudely formed as if from the hand of a young child.
    • 2014 February 23, Rivka Galchen, “What’s Become of the So-Called Literary Bad Boy?”, in The New York Times[2], New York, N.Y.: The New York Times Company, →ISSN, →OCLC, archived from the original on 2014-02-19:
      In the seventh grade I admired a charismatic, witty girl who had a particular way of writing her lowercase a's. After some practice, I took to writing my lowercase a's in the same fashion.
Usage notes
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Derived terms
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Numeral

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a (lower case, upper case A)

  1. The ordinal number first, derived from this letter of the English alphabet, called a and written in the Latin script.

Noun

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a (plural a's or (rare) aes)

  1. The name of the Latin script letter A / a.
    • 1816, William Young Ottley, An Inquiry Into the Origin and Early History of Engraving [], volume II, London: [] John and Arthur Arch, [] by J. M'Creery, page 621:
      This piece somewhat resembles an a. On the left is a man seated on the ground, with a dog between his legs, and a large bird of prey in his hands, which appears to be biting his head.
    • 1842, Alfred Tennyson, “The Epic”, in Poems. [], volume II, London: Edward Moxon, [], →OCLC, page 2:
      But with some prelude of disparagement, / Read, mouthing out his hollow oes and aes, / Deep-chested music, and to this result.
    • [1906, Leigh H[adley] Irvine, “Abbreviations in General”, in The Magazine Style Code: A Manual For The Guidance Of Authors, Reporters And All Who Write, San Francisco, C.A.: Crown Publishing Company, pages 15–16:
      Letters should be spelled as follows; aes, bees, cees, dees, ees, efs, gees, aitches, ies, jays, kays, els, ems, ens, oes, pees, ques, ars, esses, tees, ues, vees, ws or dubleyuz, exes, wyes, zees.]
    • 1993, Frank Pagden, “Teaching”, in The Gospel According to St. Lynas, Tunbridge Wells: Mitre, →ISBN, unnumbered page:
      St Lynas was chatting with a group of rebellious young college students one day, who decried the moral standards of the past. ¶ So St Lynas drew an 'a' on some paper, and asked them what it was. ¶ 'A' they said.
    • 2023, Amanda Stevens, Secret of Shutter Lake, Toronto, Ont.: Harlequin Intrigue, →ISBN, page 237:
      Compare Lydia's signature on some of the work orders with the warning notes. The loop through the lowercase a is similar. See what I mean?
Alternative forms
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Derived terms
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Translations
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Etymology 2

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    From Middle English a, an, from Old English ān (one; a; lone; sole). More at one. The "n" was gradually lost before consonants in almost all dialects by the 15th century. Cognate with Alemannic German a (a, an), East Franconian a (a, an).

    Pronunciation

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    Article

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    a

    1. An unspecified example of (something); the indefinite article. [from before 1150][1]
      There was a man here looking for you yesterday.
      • 1835, [Washington Irving], chapter XX, in A Tour on the Prairies (The Crayon Miscellany; no. 1), Philadelphia, Pa.: [Henry Charles] Carey, [Isaac] Lea, & Blanchard, →OCLC, page 151:
        He had another formidable difficulty in getting him across the river, where both horses stuck for a time in the mire, and Beatte was nearly unseated from his saddle by the force of the current and the struggles of his captive.
      • 1859 December 13, Charles Dickens, “The Mortals in the House”, in Charles Dickens, editor, The Haunted House. The Extra Christmas Number of All the Year Round [], volume II, London: [] C[harles] Whiting, [], →OCLC, page 6, column 1:
        The young man thanked me, and took his leave with some little precipitation, after declining a glass of liquor.
      • 1868 January 4 – June 6, [William] Wilkie Collins, “(please specify the page) [Fourth Narrative. Extracted from the Journal of Ezra Jennings.]”, in The Moonstone. A Romance. [], volume III, London: Tinsley Brothers, [], published 1868, →OCLC, page 185:
        Speaking as a servant, I am deeply indebted to you. Speaking as a man, I consider you to be a person whose head is full of maggots, and I take up my testimony against your experiment as a delusion and a snare.
      • 1992, Rudolf M[athias] Schuster, “Preface”, in The Hepaticae and Anthocerotae of North America: East of the Hundredth Meridian, volume V, Chicago, Ill.: Field Museum of Natural History, →ISBN, page vii:
        With fresh material, taxonomic conclusions are leavened by recognition that the material examined reflects the site it occupied; a herbarium packet gives one only a small fraction of the data desirable for sound conclusions. Herbarium material does not, indeed, allow one to extrapolate safely: what you see is what you get []
      • 2005, Emily Kingsley (lyricist), Kevin Clash (voice actor), “A Cookie is a Sometime Food”, Sesame Street, season 36, Sesame Workshop:
        Hoots the Owl: Yes a, fruit, is a [sic], any, time, food!
      • 2016, VOA Learning English (public domain)
        Anna, do you have a pen? — Yes. I have a pen in my bag. I have a (stressed) …
        Audio (US):(file)
      • 2023 March 9, Moya Lothian-Mclean, “A nose ring, a bicycle, a Radiohead album: I'm becoming a total cliche – and I quite like it”, in Katharine Viner, editor, The Guardian[3], London: Guardian News & Media, →ISSN, →OCLC, archived from the original on 2024-05-11:
        In retrospect, I realise, I had been unconsciously devoting a large amount of energy to negative choice, a concept I'm borrowing and adapting from sociologist Eva Illouz's 2019 treatise, The End of Love (by way of a viral Paris Review essay).
      • 2024 May 21, Sarah Larson, “When the C.I.A. Turned Writers Into Operatives”, in The New Yorker[4], New York, N.Y.: Condé Nast Publications, →ISSN, →OCLC, archived from the original on 2024-05-21:
        The C.I.A. infiltrated not just magazines, radio, and movies but youth organizations and movements like Abstract Expressionism; all were meant to inspire a reverence for democracy and freedom, a project that, in Walker's telling, often tips into absurdity.
    2. One; used before score, dozen, hundred, thousand, million, etc.
      I've seen it happen a hundred times.
      • 1945, Peter Cheyney, Sinister Errand, London: Collins, published 1952, page 8:
        Everybody drinks a lot in wartime, but it seemed to me that I must have drunk enough to float a couple of battleships.
      • 1999, Sara Hylton, Separate Lives, London: Piatkus, →ISBN, page 93:
        You've seen it a dozen times already.
      • 2024 February 27, “The economics of skiing in America”, in The Economist[5], London: The Economist Group, →ISSN, →OCLC, archived from the original on 8 May 2024:
        By the time he gets onto a chair, the pristine powder snow below the lift has already been chopped up by a hundred tracks, and the line to get back up stretches the length of a football field.
    3. Used in some phrases denoting quantity, such as a few, a good many, a couple, a little, a bit, etc.
      He's a bit thick, isn't he?
      They asked me a few questions.
      • 1869, Louisa M[ay] Alcott, “My Lord and Lady”, in Little Women: [], part second, Boston, Mass.: Roberts Brothers, →OCLC, page 315:
        But I was going to say, that while I was dawdling about abroad, I saw a good many talented young fellows making all sorts of sacrifices, and enduring real hardships, that they might realize their dreams. Splendid fellows, some of them, working like heroes, poor and friendless, but so full of courage, patience and ambition, that I was ashamed of myself, and longed to give them a right good lift.
      • 1989, Robert T. Michael, Heidi I[rmgard] Hartmann, Brigid O'Farrell, editors, Pay Equity: Empirical Inquiries, Washington, D.C.: National Academy Press, →ISBN, page 3, column 2:
        The main influence here is job tenure—the men had been at their specific jobs a good while longer than the women.
      • 2024 February 13, René M. van Westen, Henk A. Dijkstra, Michael Kliphuis, “If the Atlantic Ocean Loses Circulation, What Happens Next?”, in Scientific American[6], New York, N.Y.: Springer Nature America, Inc., →ISSN, →OCLC, archived from the original on 13 February 2024:
        Twenty years after the movie's release, we know a lot more about the Atlantic Ocean's circulation. Instruments deployed in the ocean starting in 2004 show that the Atlantic Ocean circulation has observably slowed over the past two decades, possibly to its weakest state in almost a millennium.
      1. Used before a numeral.
        There are a few hundred orders that need to be fulfilled by tomorrow.
        • 1934, Alan Villiers, Whalers of the Midnight Sun: [], New York, N.Y., London: Charles Scribner's Sons, page 154:
          The blues were eating leisurely, swimming about and opening their great mouths, spouting and filling their enormous stomachs with intense satisfaction. They had no idea of danger. There must have been about fifteen of them, peacefully feeding. One of them, its belly gorged probably with a few trillion plankton, seemed to be lying asleep on the surface.
        • 2020 July 31, Brian Friedberg, “The Dark Virality of a Hollywood Blood-Harvesting Conspiracy”, in Wired[7], San Francisco, C.A.: Condé Nast Publications, →ISSN, →OCLC, archived from the original on 2024-05-15:
          The impact of hidden virality can't be stopped by retroactively banning a few thousand Twitter accounts; it is an iterative, memetic phenomenon that outpaces terms of service.
        • 2023, Don Winslow, City of Dreams, London: HarperCollins Publishers, →ISBN, page 332:
          That was on the first day's walk. It took him until day three, after a good ten miles, to ask her out.
    4. Used in some adverbial phrases denoting the degree or extent of an action, such as a little, a bit, a lot, etc.
      The door was opened a little.
      • 1978, Deane H. Shapiro, Jr., Precision Nirvana, Englewood Cliffs, N.J.: Prentice Hall, Inc., →ISBN, page 104:
        If, for example, you ask a child what he likes to do, he may say he doesn't know. However, if you watch him during free time, and note that he plays basketball a lot, you may infer that this is a high-probability behavior, and he finds it reinforcing.
      • 2009, James H. S. McGregor, Paris From the Ground Up, Cambridge, M.A., London: Belknap Press, →ISBN, page 163:
        The bridge was shifted a bit to the east and rebuilt, this time with the shops of money-changers along both sides.
      • 2023 January 13, Dana G. Smith, “Even a Little Alcohol Can Harm Your Health, Research Shows”, in The New York Times[8], New York, N.Y.: The New York Times Company, →ISSN, →OCLC, archived from the original on 2024-05-10:
        You don't need to go cold turkey to help your health. Even reducing a little bit can be beneficial, especially if you currently drink over the recommended limits.
    5. The same; one and the same. Used in phrases such as of a kind, birds of a feather, etc.
      We are of a mind on matters of morals.
      They're two of a kind.
    6. Any; every; used before a noun which has become modified to limit its scope.[2]
      A man who dies intestate leaves his children troubles and difficulties.
    7. Any; used with a negative to indicate not a single one.[3]
      It was so dark that we couldn't see a thing.
      He fell all that way, and hasn't a bump on his head?
      • 2001, Stephen Lawhead, The Mystic Rose Book (Celtic Crusades; III), London,  []: BCA, page 180:
        No, it is impossible. My conscience would give me not a moment's peace if I let you go. I would never forgive myself.
      • 2014, Sherry D. Ficklin, Queen of Someday: A Stolen Empire Novel, [Colony, T.X.]: Clean Teen Publishing, →ISBN, page 116:
        When had my own feelings become so muddled and complicated? Before I take a single step, he catches my arm, turning me to him.
      • 2016, Daphna Rabinovitch, “Fudge Truffle Tart”, in The Baker in Me, Vancouver, B.C.: Whitecap Books, →ISBN, page 204:
        My friend Cindy's husband, Michael Zahavi, a true chocoholic if there ever was one, adores this tart. In fact, when I visited their cottage up in Muskoka, Ontario one summer and brought this along as a treat, he got up in the middle of the night to nosh away at it, leaving us sleepyheads with nary a crumb the next day.
    8. Used before an adjective that modifies a noun (singular or plural) delimited by a numeral.
      The lottery jackpot is worth a staggering three hundred million dollars.
      The holidays are a mere one week away.
    9. One; someone named; used before a person's name, suggesting that the speaker knows little about the person other than the name.[4]
      We've received an interesting letter from a Mrs. Miggins of London.
    10. Used before an adjective modifying a person's name, typically used to emphasize that person's current condition or emotional state.
      • 1963, Robert Hancock, Ruth Ellis: The Last Woman To Be Hanged, London: Orion, published 1993, →ISBN, page 35:
        At Waterloo she asked George for £5 and said that she would go home by tube, and a relieved George watched her descend the Underground steps.
      • 2016, David J. Bailey, The Storm, London: Austin Macauley Publishers Ltd., →ISBN, page 147:
        "There, I think that's done it," declared a triumphant John, "we just need to try it with the bar now, where is it?"
      • 2018, “Rwandan court drops all charges against opposition figure”, in Associated Press:
        "I will continue my campaign to fight for the rights of all Rwandans," a surprised but happy Rwigara told reporters after celebrating.
    11. Someone or something like; similar to; used before a proper noun to create an example out of it.[3]
      The center of the village was becoming a Times Square.
      The man is a regular Romeo.
      • 1987, Frederic V. Grunfeld, Rodin: A Biography, New York, N.Y.: Henry Holt and Company, →ISBN, page 88:
        [Jules] Pécher actually sculpted a sort of Statue of Liberty for the centerpiece of the monument, but for the rest he thought it advisable to call in Van Rasbourgh, and Rodin thus became a ghost sculptor to a ghost sculptor.
      • 2009, Ed Macy, Hellfire, London: Harper Press, →ISBN, page 134:
        Billy fancied himself as a bit of a Han Solo, but he shook his head. 'Stop being a wuss.' He grinned. 'Your go.'
      • 2020, Laura Erickson, The Love Lives of Birds: Courting and Mating Rituals, North Adams, M.A.: Storey Publishing, →ISBN, page 81:
        For the first 5 or 6 days after the eggs hatch, the mother spends most of her time keeping the chicks warm while the father provides most of their meals. All that work may be what prompts the female to leave the family. They share feeding duties more equally during the next week or 10 days, until the young leave the nest. Producing a second batch is easier if she skips the last grueling week or two of provisioning fledglings. She can recharge her batteries by moseying off and, while on vacation, looking for a new Casanova.
    Usage notes
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    • In standard English, the article a is used before consonant sounds, while an is used before vowel sounds; for more, see the usage notes about an.
    Derived terms
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    Translations
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    Etymology 3

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    Pronunciation

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    Preposition

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    a

    1. To do with separation; In, into. [from before 1150][1]
      torn a pieces
    2. To do with time; Each, per, in, on, by. Often occurs between two nouns, where the first noun occurs at the end of a verbal phrase.[from before 1150][1]
      I brush my teeth twice a day.
    3. To do with status; In. [from before 1150][1]
    4. (archaic) To do with position or direction; In, on, at, by, towards, onto. [from before 1150][1]
      stand a tiptoe
    5. (archaic) To do with process, with a passive verb; In the course of, experiencing. [from before 1150][1]
    6. (archaic) To do with an action, an active verb; Engaged in. [16th c.][1]
    7. (archaic) To do with an action/movement; To, into. [16th c.][1]
    8. (obsolete) To do with method; In, with. [from before 1150][1]
    9. (obsolete) To do with role or capacity; In. [from before 1150][1]
    Usage notes
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    • (position, direction): Can also be attached without a hyphen, as aback, ahorse, afoot. See a-
    • (separation): Can also be attached without hyphen, as asunder. See a-
    • (status): Can also be attached without hyphen, as afloat, awake. See a-.
    • (process): Can also be attached with or without hyphen, as a-changing
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    Etymology 4

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    From Middle English a, ha contraction of have, or haven.

    Alternative forms

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    Verb

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    a

    1. (dialectal or slang) Have (auxiliary verb).
      I'd a come, if you'd a asked.
    2. (dialectal or slang, rare) had (auxiliary verb).
    Usage notes
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    • Now often attached to a preceding auxiliary verb. See -a.
    Derived terms
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    Etymology 5

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    From Middle English a, a reduced form of he (he)/ha (he), heo (she)/ha (she), ha (it), and hie, hie (they).

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    Pronoun

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    a

    1. (obsolete outside England and Scotland dialects) He, she, they: the third-person singular or plural nominative.[4]
      • 1855, Kingsley, W. Ho!, page 120 (edition of 1889):
        He've a got a great venture on hand, but what a [it] be he tell'th no man.
      • 1864, Tennyson, N. Farmer, Old Style, st. 2:
        Doctors, they knaws nowt, fur a [they] says what's nawways true.
      1. (obsolete outside England and Scotland dialects) He, the third-person singular nominative.
        • 1598–1599 (first performance), William Shakespeare, “Much Adoe about Nothing”, in Mr. William Shakespeares Comedies, Histories, & Tragedies [] (First Folio), London: [] Isaac Iaggard, and Ed[ward] Blount, published 1623, →OCLC, [Act III, scene ii]:
          a’ brushes his hat o’ mornings.
        • 1795, Peter Pindar, The Royal Visit to Exeter, a Political Epistle: by John Ploughshare ... published by Peter Pindar, Esq, page 5:
          Well! in a come [in he came]—KING GEORGE to town, / With doust and zweat az netmeg brown, / The hosses all in smoke;
        • 1860, Kite, Sng. Sol., ii, 16:
          A do veed amang th' lilies.
        • 1864, Tennyson, N. Farmer, Old Style, st. 7, version of 1917, Raymond Macdonald Alden, Alfred Tennyson, how to Know Him, page 226:
          "The amoighty's a taakin' o' you to 'issén, my friend," a said, []
      2. (obsolete outside England and Scotland dialects) She, the third-person singular nominative.
        • 1790, Grose, MS. add. (M.):
          A wanted me to go with her.
        • 1876, Bound, Prov.:
          Did a do it!
        • 1883, Hardy, Tover, page 124 (edition of 1895):
          A's getting wambling on her pins [shaky on her legs].

    Etymology 6

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      From Middle English of, with apocope of the final f and vowel reduction.

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      Preposition

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      a

      1. (archaic or slang) Of.
        The name of John a Gaunt.
      Usage notes
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      • Often attached without a hyphen to preceding word.

      Etymology 7

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      From Northern Middle English aw, alteration of all.

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      Pronunciation

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      Adverb

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      a (not comparable)

      1. (chiefly Scotland) All. [from ca. 1350—1470]

      Adjective

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      a (not comparable)

      1. (chiefly Scotland) All. [from ca. 1350—1470]

      Etymology 8

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      Alternative forms

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      Particle

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      a

      1. Pronunciation spelling of to.
        • 1923 January, “The Sunshine of Childhood (Contributed)”, in Benedict Brown, editor, The Grail, volume 4, number 9, St. Meinrad, Ind.: The Abbey Press, page 284, column 2:
          James was going with his mother to attend the ceremonies at which his oldest sister in the convent would make perpetual vows. Being asked where he was going, he answered, “I’m goin’ a see my sister make percapital vowels.”
        • 2007, BK Loren, “Got Tape?”, in Barry Lopez, editor, The Future of Nature: Writing on a Human Ecology from Orion Magazine, Minneapolis, Minn.: Milkweed Editions, →ISBN, page 43:
          The man walks toward me. “I met that asshole. He’s tryin’ a sell us a bag a bullshit.”
        • 2012 October 23, Tom Wolfe, Back to Blood: A Novel, Large Print edition, New York, N.Y.: Little, Brown and Company, →ISBN, page 66:
          Don’tcha try deny it, / ’Cause Hose knows you dyin’ a try it— [] Knows you out tryin’ a buy it, / But Hose only gives it free
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      Etymology 9

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      Contraction of gonna, itself a reduction of going to; see Etymology 8 above (“to”).

      Contraction

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      a

      1. (African-American Vernacular) Used to express a future action; going to.
        I'm a go see what's going on out there.
        • 2010, Todd Bridges, Killing Willis: From Diff'rent Strokes to the Mean Streets to the Life I Always Wanted, New York, N.Y.: Touchstone Books, →ISBN, page 146:
          "Sure, Billy, I'm a run downstairs to the machine and get me a pack of bigarettes," he said, taking off with his Melody.
        • 2012, Bertrand E. Brown, Sylvia's Dilemma: A Novel, →ISBN, page 95:
          Ain't nothin' in the house to eat and now that we has Mr. Alex staying with us a few days I'm a need to buy some groceries so yous two can have the house to yo'self 'til I get back.
        • 2018, Monica Jeremie, Married to a Dade County Bully 2, Urban Chapters Publications, →ISBN, page 85:
          I'm a head out there now and take a look.
        • 2021, Ioan Grillo, Blood Gun Money: How America Arms Gangs and Cartels, New York, N.Y. []: Bloomsbury Publishing, →ISBN, page 141:
          "The Glock 26 and the motherfucking, uh, the Hi-Point. I'm a try to get the both of them," another said.

      Usage notes

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      • Mainly used in the phrase I'm a, which is usually spelled Imma.
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      Etymology 10

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      Contraction of and.[5]

      Conjunction

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      a

      1. (obsolete, dialectal, rare) Contraction of and.
        • 1655, William Barton, Man's Monitor, or, the Free-school of Virtue; Holding Forth the Duties Required and Sins Forbidden in the Two Tables of the Law., London: W.D. for T. Underhill, unnumbered page; republished in Early English Books Online, Ann Arbor, Mich.: Text Creation Partnership, p. 2011:
          By cock a pie and Mous-foot Dent bring's in, / Examples to express forbidden Sin:
        • 1746, “Exmoor Scolding: Or, a Devonſhire Dialogue:”, in The Gentleman's Magazine, and Historical Chronicle, volume XVI, London: Edw. Cave, →ISSN, →OCLC, page 353, column 2:
          Thee lace ma? Chem a laced well-a-fine aready.—Zey wone word more, and chell breſh tha, chell make thy boddize pilmee.
        • 1823, Edward Moor, Suffolk Words and Phrases: Or, An Attempt to Collect the Lingual Localisms of that County, London: J. Loder, page 2:
          4. as if. "I'll gi ye a dunt i' the hid 'a ye dew so no more." This is equivalent to the "an if" of some of our old writers.
      Usage notes
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      • The Oxford English Dictionary notes: "The form is not common in any period, and some of the earlier examples could instead show a transmission error for an in its abbreviated form (i.e. ā, with mark of suspension)."[5]

      Etymology 11

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      Symbol

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      a

      1. Distance from leading edge to aerodynamic center.
      2. specific absorption coefficient
      3. (chemistry) specific rotation
      4. (genetics) allele (recessive)

      Etymology 12

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      Adverb

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      a

      1. (crosswords) across
        Do you have the answer for 23a?
      2. (chiefly US) Alternative spelling of a.m. (ante meridiem) or am

      Etymology 13

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      Particle

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      a

      1. Alternative form of -a (empty syllable added to songs, poetry, verse and other speech)
        • 2001, Louis F. Newcomb, Car Salesman: A Legacy, iUniverse (→ISBN), page 91:
          “I show a you right a here I can fuck a you.” “Is she crazy?” I asked Wyman.

      Etymology 14

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      Borrowed from Russian а (a).

      Noun

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      a

      1. The name of the Cyrillic script letter А / а.

      Translations

      edit

      Etymology 15

      edit

      Interjection

      edit

      a

      1. ah; er (sound of hesitation)
        • 1847 January – 1848 July, William Makepeace Thackeray, Vanity Fair [], London: Bradbury and Evans [], published 1848, →OCLC:
          "We will resume yesterday's discourse, young ladies," said he, "and you shall each read a page by turns; so that Miss a—Miss Short may have an opportunity of hearing you"; and the poor girls began to spell a long dismal sermon delivered at Bethesda Chapel, Liverpool, on behalf of the mission for the Chickasaw Indians.

      Etymology 16

      edit

      Abbreviations.

      1. (stenoscript) a word-initial letter ⟨a⟩.
      2. (stenoscript) the long vowel /eɪ/ at the end of a word, or before a final consonant that is not /dʒ, v, z/. (Note: the final consonant is not written; [ɛə˞] counts as /eɪr/.)
        Thus the word a, plus its inflection an.
      3. (stenoscript) the word a.m.
      4. (stenoscript) the prefix ad-.

      Quotations

      edit

      Additional quotations for any terms on this page may be found at Citations:a.

      References

      edit
      1. 1.00 1.01 1.02 1.03 1.04 1.05 1.06 1.07 1.08 1.09 Brown, Lesley, (2003)
      2. ^ Gove, Philip Babcock, (1976)
      3. 3.0 3.1 Lindberg, Christine A. (2007)
      4. 4.0 4.1 Oxford University Press, (2023)
      5. 5.0 5.1 a, conj.”, in OED Online  , Oxford, Oxfordshire: Oxford University Press, launched 2000.

      Further reading

      edit

      Abau

      edit

      Pronunciation

      edit

      IPA(key): /a/

      Noun

      edit

      a

      1. house

      Afar

      edit

      Pronunciation

      edit

      Determiner

      edit

      á

      1. this, these (masculine)

      Derived terms

      edit

      See also

      edit

      See Template:aa-demonstrative determiners.

      References

      edit
      • E. M. Parker, R. J. Hayward (1985) “a”, in An Afar-English-French dictionary (with Grammatical Notes in English), University of London, →ISBN
      • Mohamed Hassan Kamil (2015) L’afar: description grammaticale d’une langue couchitique (Djibouti, Erythrée et Ethiopie)[11], Paris: Université Sorbonne Paris Cité (doctoral thesis)

      Albanian

      edit

      Etymology 1

      edit

      Alternative forms

      edit

      Pronunciation

      edit

      Conjunction

      edit

      a

      1. or
      2. there

      Etymology 2

      edit

      From Proto-Albanian *(h)an, from Proto-Indo-European *h₂en (there). Cognate with Latin an (yes, perhaps). Interrogative particle, usually used proclitically in simple sentences.

      Pronunciation

      edit

      Particle

      edit

      a

      1. probably, perhaps
      2. whether

      Letter

      edit

      a (lower case, upper case A)

      1. The first letter of the Standard Albanian Latin-script alphabet.

      See also

      edit

      References

      edit
      1. ^ Orel, Vladimir E. (1998) “a part. ('whether'), conj. ('or')”, in Albanian Etymological Dictionary, Leiden, Boston, Köln: Brill, →ISBN, page 1
      2. ^ Mann, S. E. (1948) “a”, in An Historical Albanian–English Dictionary, London: Longmans, Green & Co., page 1

      Further reading

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      • “a”, in FGJSSH: Fjalor i gjuhës së sotme shqipe [Dictionary of the modern Albanian language]‎[12] (in Albanian), 1980
      • a”, in FGJSH: Fjalor i gjuhës shqipe [Dictionary of the Albanian language] (in Albanian), 2006

      Pronunciation

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      Noun

      edit

      a

      1. tree

      Anguthimri

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      Verb

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      a

      1. (transitive, Mpakwithi) to pull

      References

      edit
      • Terry Crowley, The Mpakwithi dialect of Anguthimri (1981), page 184

      Aragonese

      edit

      Etymology

      edit

      From Latin illa.

      Article

      edit

      a f sg

      1. the
        a luenga aragonesathe Aragonese language

      Asturian

      edit

      Etymology

      edit

      From Latin ad.

      Pronunciation

      edit

      Preposition

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      a

      1. to, towards

      Derived terms

      edit

      Noun

      edit

      a f

      1. a (the name of the letter A, a)

      Azerbaijani

      edit

      Pronunciation

      edit

      Letter

      edit

      a (lower case, upper case A)

      1. The first letter of the Azerbaijani alphabet, written in the Latin script.

      See also

      edit

      Bambara

      edit

      Article

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      a

      1. the (definite article).

      Interjection

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      a

      1. ah (expression of surprise)
      2. eh (expression of reluctance)

      Pronoun

      edit

      a

      1. they, them (plural)
      2. he, she, they (singular)

      Synonyms

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      • (they): u

      Basque

      edit

      Pronunciation

      edit

      Letter

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      a (lower case, upper case A)

      1. The first letter of the Basque alphabet, written in the Latin script.

      See also

      edit

      Noun

      edit

      a (indeclinable)

      1. The name of the Latin-script letter A.

      See also

      edit

      Bavarian

      edit

      Etymology 1

      edit

      Cognate with German ein, eine, Yiddish אַ (a), אַן (an).

      Pronunciation

      edit

      Article

      edit

      a

      1. a
      See also
      edit
      • oa (one, determiner)

      Etymology 2

      edit

      Unstressed form of ea

      Pronunciation

      edit

      Pronoun

      edit

      a

      1. he
      See also
      edit

      Etymology 3

      edit

      Cognate with German auch.

      Adverb

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      a

      1. Alternative form of aa: also, too, as well

      Belizean Creole

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      Preposition

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      a

      1. of

      References

      edit
      • Crosbie, Paul, ed. (2007), Kriol-Inglish Dikshineri: English-Kriol Dictionary. Belize City: Belize Kriol Project, p. 19.

      Big Nambas

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      Pronunciation

      edit

      Preposition

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      a

      1. in

      References

      edit

      Breton

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      Etymology 1

      edit

      From Proto-Brythonic *o, from Proto-Indo-European *h₂pó.

      Pronunciation

      edit

      Preposition

      edit

      a (triggers soft mutation)

      1. from (expresses origin)
        tud a Vrestpeople from Brest
      2. of (indicates an amount)
        un tamm brav a giga nice piece of meat
      3. of (expresses a quality)
        ur plac’h a enora girl of honour
      4. after certain adjectives or adverbs expressing quantity
        ur voutailh leun a sistra bottle full of cider
      5. after ordinal numbers with a plural noun
        tri a vugalethree children
      6. used in negative sentences with the grammatical object
        nʼem eus ket ken a vutunI donʼt have any more tobacco
      7. before the infinitive after certain verbs like paouez, mirout, diwall, c'hwitañ
        paouezet eo ar glav a gouezhañit has stopped raining [lit. the rain has stopped falling]
      8. after substantivized adjectives used as nouns
        ur vrav a blacʼha pretty girl
      9. combined with a personal pronoun
        gwelet em boa acʼhanoutI saw you
        an den a gomzan anezhañthe man Iʼm talking about
      Inflection
      edit

      Etymology 2

      edit

      Pronunciation

      edit

      Particle

      edit

      a (triggers soft mutation)

      1. preverbal particle used when
        1. the subject precedes the verb
          ar mor a zo glasthe sea is blue
        2. the object precedes the verb
          an den-se a glevanI hear that man

      Pronoun

      edit

      a (triggers soft mutation)

      1. (relative) that, which, who (used in 'direct' relative clauses, i.e. where the pronoun refers to the subject or the direct object of an inflected verb)
        an hini a garanthe one whom I love

      Cameroon Pidgin

      edit

      Pronoun

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      a

      1. Alternative spelling of I (1st person singular subject personal pronoun)

      Catalan

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      Etymology 1

      edit

      Pronunciation

      edit

      Letter

      edit

      a (lower case, upper case A)

      1. The first letter of the Catalan alphabet, written in the Latin script.
      Derived terms
      edit
      See also
      edit

      Etymology 2

      edit

      From Latin ad.

      Pronunciation

      edit

      Preposition

      edit

      a

      1. in, at; indicating a particular time or place
        Sóc a Barcelona.
        I am in Barcelona.
      2. to; indicating movement towards a particular place
        Vaig a Barcelona.
        I'm going to Barcelona.
      3. to; indicating a target or indirect object
        Escric una carta a la meva àvia.
        I'm writing my grandmother a letter.
      4. per
      5. by
        dia a dia.
        day by day.
      Usage notes
      edit
      • When the preposition a is followed by a masculine definite article, el or els, it is contracted with it to the forms al and als respectively. If el would be elided to the form l’ because it is before a word beginning with a vowel, the elision to a l’ takes precedence over contracting to al.

      The same occurs with the salat article es, to form as except where es would be elided to s’.

      Derived terms
      edit

      Chayuco Mixtec

      edit

      Etymology

      edit

      (This etymology is missing or incomplete. Please add to it, or discuss it at the Etymology scriptorium.)

      Conjunction

      edit

      a

      1. or

      References

      edit
      • Pensinger, Brenda J. (1974) Diccionario mixteco-español, español-mixteco (Serie de vocabularios y diccionarios indígenas “Mariano Silva y Aceves”; 18)‎[13] (in Spanish), México, D.F.: El Instituto Lingüístico de Verano en coordinación con la Secretaría de Educación Pública a través de la Dirección General de Educación Extraescolar en el Medio Indígena, pages 3, 110

      Chibcha

      edit

      Pronunciation

      edit

      Noun

      edit

      a

      1. open mouth
      2. smell, taste

      References

      edit
      • Gómez Aldana D. F., Análisis morfológico del Vocabulario 158 de la Biblioteca Nacional de Colombia. Grupo de Investigación Muysccubun. 2013.

      Choctaw

      edit

      Conjunction

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      a

      1. yes

      Chuukese

      edit

      Pronunciation

      edit

      Pronoun

      edit

      a

      1. he
      2. she
      3. it

      Adjective

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      a

      1. he is
      2. she is
      3. it is
      edit
      Present and past tense Negative tense Future Negative future Distant future Negative determinate
      Singular First person ua use upwe usap upwap ute
      Second person ka, ke kose, kese kopwe, kepwe kosap, kesap kopwap, kepwap kote, kete
      Third person a ese epwe esap epwap ete
      Plural First person aua (exclusive)
      sia (inclusive)
      ause (exclusive)
      sise (inclusive)
      aupwe (exclusive)
      sipwe (inclusive)
      ausap (exclusive)
      sisap (inclusive)
      aupwap (exclusive)
      sipwap (inclusive)
      aute (exclusive)
      site (inclusive)
      Second person oua ouse oupwe ousap oupwap oute
      Third person ra, re rese repwe resap repwap rete


      Cimbrian

      edit

      Alternative forms

      edit
      • an (Sette Comuni)

      Etymology

      edit

      From Middle High German ein, from Old High German ein, from Proto-West Germanic *ain.

      Article

      edit

      a (oblique masculine an)

      1. (Luserna) a, an
        Maria iz a lavròunaren.Maria is a Lavaronese.

      References

      edit

      Coatepec Nahuatl

      edit

      Noun

      edit

      a

      1. water

      Cora

      edit

      Particle

      edit

      a

      1. outside
      2. out of view (from the speaker)
      3. entering a shallow domain; entering a domain in a shallow or restricted manner
        atyásuuna káasu hece
        The water is pouring into the (shallow) pan.

      Antonyms

      edit
      • u (inside; within view)

      References

      edit
      • Eugene Casad, Ronald Langacker (1985) “'Inside' and 'outside' in Cora grammar”, in International Journal of American Linguistics

      Cornish

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      Etymology 1

      edit

      Onomatopoeic

      Pronunciation

      edit

      Interjection

      edit

      a

      1. ah

      Etymology 2

      edit

      Compare Welsh a

      Pronunciation

      edit

      Particle

      edit

      a (triggers soft mutation)

      1. Inserted before the verb when a subject or direct object precedes the verb

      Etymology 3

      edit

      From Proto-Brythonic *o, from Proto-Celtic *ɸo, from Proto-Indo-European *h₂pó.

      Pronunciation

      edit

      Preposition

      edit

      a (triggers soft mutation)

      1. of (expressing separation, origin, composition/substance or a quality)
      2. of (between a preceding large number and a following plural noun to express quantity)
      3. from (indicating provenance)

      Inflection

      edit

      Corsican

      edit

      Etymology

      edit

      From the earlier la.

      Pronunciation

      edit

      Article

      edit

      a f (masculine u, masculine plural i, feminine plural e)

      1. the (feminine)

      Usage notes

      edit
      • Before a vowel, a turns into l'

      Pronoun

      edit

      a f

      1. her, it (direct object)

      Usage notes

      edit
      • Before a vowel, a turns into l'

      See also

      edit

      References

      edit
      • a” in INFCOR: Banca di dati di a lingua corsa

      Czech

      edit

      Etymology

      edit

      Inherited from Old Czech a, from Proto-Slavic *a, from Proto-Balto-Slavic .

      Pronunciation

      edit

      Conjunction

      edit

      a

      1. and

      Further reading

      edit
      • a”, in Příruční slovník jazyka českého (in Czech), 1935-1957
      • a”, in Slovník spisovného jazyka českého (in Czech), 1960–1971, 1989

      Dakota

      edit

      Pronunciation

      edit

      IPA(key): /a/

      Letter

      edit

      a (uppercase A)

      1. This term needs a translation to English. Please help out and add a translation, then remove the text {{rfdef}}.

      See also

      edit

      Dalmatian

      edit

      Etymology

      edit

      From Latin ad.

      Preposition

      edit

      a

      1. to
      2. at

      Danish

      edit

      Etymology 1

      edit

      Pronunciation

      edit

      Letter

      edit

      a (lower case, upper case A)

      1. The first letter of the Danish alphabet, written in the Latin script.
      See also
      edit

      Etymology 2

      edit

      Pronunciation

      edit

      Noun

      edit

      a n (singular definite a'et, plural indefinite a'er)

      1. The name of the letter A or a.
      Inflection
      edit

      Etymology 3

      edit

      Alternative forms

      edit
      • à (unofficial but common)

      Pronunciation

      edit

      Preposition

      edit

      a

      1. of, of...each, each containing
      2. at
      3. to, or

      Etymology 4

      edit

      Pronunciation

      edit

      Verb

      edit

      a

      1. imperative of ae

      Dutch

      edit

      Pronunciation

      edit

      Etymology 1

      edit

      Letter

      edit

      a (lower case, upper case A)

      1. The first letter of the Dutch alphabet, written in the Latin script.
      See also
      edit

      Etymology 2

      edit

      From Middle Dutch â, from Old Dutch ā, from Proto-Germanic *ahwō.

      Alternative forms

      edit
      • aa (especially in names)
      • ie

      Noun

      edit

      a f (plural a's, diminutive aatje)

      1. (archaic) a stream or water
      edit

      Further reading

      edit

      Etymology 3

      edit

      Pronoun

      edit

      a

      1. (Brabant, dialectal) Alternative form of u (you, objective or reflexive pronoun)

      Pronoun

      edit

      a

      1. (Brabant, dialectal) Alternative form of uw (your)
      Usage notes
      edit

      The masculine singular form of the possessive pronoun is awe.

      Egyptian

      edit

      Romanization

      edit

      a

      1. Manuel de Codage transliteration of .

      Emilian

      edit

      Etymology

      edit

      From Latin ego (I).

      Pronunciation

      edit

      Pronoun

      edit

      a (personal, nominative case)

      1. I
      2. we
      3. you (plural)

      Alternative forms

      edit
      • Becomes aj- before a vowel (proclitic).
      • Becomes -ja when acting as an enclitic.
      edit

      Esperanto

      edit

      Pronunciation

      edit

      Letter

      edit

      a (lower case, upper case A)

      1. The first letter of the Esperanto alphabet, written in the Latin script.

      See also

      edit

      Noun

      edit

      a (accusative singular a-on, plural a-oj, accusative plural a-ojn)

      1. The name of the Latin-script letter A/a.

      See also

      edit

      Estonian

      edit

      Etymology 1

      edit
       a on Estonian Wikipedia

      Pronunciation

      edit

      Letter

      edit

      a (lower case, upper case A)

      1. The first letter of the Estonian alphabet, called aa and written in the Latin script.
      See also
      edit

      Noun

      edit

      a (genitive a or a', partitive a-d or a'd)

      1. The letter a (the first letter of the Estonian alphabet)
      2. (music) A (note)
        Synonym: la
      Declension
      edit

      (the first letter of the Estonian alphabet):

      Declension of a (ÕS type 26i/idee, no gradation)
      singular plural
      nominative - -d
      accusative nom.
      gen. -
      genitive -de
      partitive -d -id
      -sid
      illative -sse -desse
      -isse
      inessive -s -des
      -is
      elative -st -dest
      -ist
      allative -le -dele
      -ile
      adessive -l -del
      -il
      ablative -lt -delt
      -ilt
      translative -ks -deks
      -iks
      terminative -ni -deni
      essive -na -dena
      abessive -ta -deta
      comitative -ga -dega

      (music):

      Declension of a (ÕS type 26i/idee, no gradation)
      singular plural
      nominative ' 'd
      accusative nom.
      gen. '
      genitive 'de
      partitive 'd 'id
      'sid
      illative 'sse 'desse
      'isse
      inessive 's 'des
      'is
      elative 'st 'dest
      'ist
      allative 'le 'dele
      'ile
      adessive 'l 'del
      'il
      ablative 'lt 'delt
      'ilt
      translative 'ks 'deks
      'iks
      terminative 'ni 'deni
      essive 'na 'dena
      abessive 'ta 'deta
      comitative 'ga 'dega

      Etymology 2

      edit

      Clipping of aga. Probably influenced by Russian а (a).

      Conjunction

      edit

      a

      1. (colloquial, in fast speech) but

      Etymology 3

      edit

      Noun

      edit

      a

      1. Abbreviation of aasta.
      2. Abbreviation of aar.

      References

      edit
      • a in Sõnaveeb (Eesti Keele Instituut)
      • a”, in [EKSS] Eesti keele seletav sõnaraamat [Descriptive Dictionary of the Estonian Language] (in Estonian) (online version), Tallinn: Eesti Keele Sihtasutus (Estonian Language Foundation), 2009

      Fala

      edit

      Etymology 1

      edit

      From Old Galician-Portuguese á, from Latin illa (that).

      Article

      edit

      a f sg (plural as, masculine u or o, masculine plural us or os)

      1. Feminine singular definite article; the
        • 2000, Domingo Frades Gaspar, Vamus a falal: Notas pâ coñocel y platical en nosa fala, Editora regional da Extremadura, Chapter 1: Lengua Española:
          A grandeda da lengua española é indiscotibli, i sei estudio, utilización defensa debin sel algo consostancial a nos, []
          The greatness of the Spanish language is unquestionable, and its study, use and defense must be something consubstantial to us, []

      Pronoun

      edit

      a

      1. Third person singular feminine accusative pronoun; her
      See also
      edit

      Etymology 2

      edit

      From Old Galician-Portuguese a, from Latin ad (to).

      Preposition

      edit

      a

      1. to
        • 2000, Domingo Frades Gaspar, Vamus a falal: Notas pâ coñocel y platical en nosa fala, Editora regional da Extremadura, Chapter 1: Lengua Española:
          A grandeda da lengua española é indiscotibli, i sei estudio, utilización defensa debin sel algo consostancial a nos, []
          The greatness of the Spanish language is unquestionable, and its study, use and defense must be something consubstantial to us, []

      References

      edit
      • Valeš, Miroslav (2021) Diccionariu de A Fala: lagarteiru, mañegu, valverdeñu (web)[14], 2nd edition, Minde, Portugal: CIDLeS, published 2022, →ISBN

      Faroese

      edit

      Etymology

      edit

      From Latin a.

      Pronunciation

      edit

      Letter

      edit

      a (upper case A)

      1. The first letter of the Faroese alphabet, written in the Latin script.

      See also

      edit

      Finnish

      edit

      Etymology 1

      edit

      The Finnish orthography using the Latin script was based on those of Swedish, German and Latin, and was first used in the mid-16th century. No earlier script is known. See the Wikipedia article on Finnish for more information, and a for information on the development of the glyph itself.

      Letter

      edit

      a (lower case, upper case A)

      1. The first letter of the Finnish alphabet, written in the Latin script.
      See also
      edit

      Etymology 2

      edit

      German musical notation.

      Noun

      edit

      a

      1. (music) A (note)
      Usage notes
      edit

      Capitalized for the great octave or any octave below that, or in names of major keys; not capitalized for the small octave or any octave above that, or in names of minor keys.

      Declension
      edit
      Derived terms
      edit
      compounds

      Franco-Provençal

      edit

      Etymology

      edit

      Inherited from Latin ad.

      Pronoun

      edit

      a (ORB)

      1. to
      2. at
      3. of (possessive)

      Derived terms

      edit

      References

      edit
      • Stich, Dominique (2003) “a”, in Dictionnaire francoprovençal/français, français/francoprovençal: Dictionnaire des mots de base du francoprovençal: Orthographe ORB supradialectale standardisée, Thonon-les-Bains: Éditions Le Carré:a (sert parfois à la possession).

      French

      edit

      Etymology 1

      edit

      Pronunciation

      edit

      Letter

      edit

      a (lower case, upper case A)

      1. The first letter of the French alphabet, written in the Latin script.

      Noun

      edit

      a m or f (plural as)

      1. a, the name of the Latin-script letter A

      Derived terms

      edit

      Etymology 2

      edit

      Quebec eye-dialect spelling of elle.

      Pronunciation

      edit

      Pronoun

      edit

      a f

      1. (Quebec, colloquial) alternative form of elle (she)
        C’te fille-là, a’a l’air cute.
        That girl, she looks cute.

      Etymology 3

      edit

      From Old French a, at from Vulgar Latin *at, from Latin habet.

      Pronunciation

      edit

      Verb

      edit

      a

      1. third-person singular present indicative of avoir
        Elle a un chat.
        She has a cat.

      See also

      edit

      Further reading

      edit

      Fula

      edit

      Etymology 1

      edit

      Letter

      edit

      a (lower case, upper case A)

      1. The first letter of the Fula alphabet, written in the Latin script.
      Usage notes
      edit
      See also
      edit

      Etymology 2

      edit

      Pronoun

      edit

      a

      1. you (second person singular subject pronoun; short form)
      Usage notes
      edit
      • Common to all varieties of Fula (Fulfulde / Pulaar / Pular).
      • Used in all conjugations except the affirmative non-accomplished, where the long form is used instead.
      See also
      edit
      • aɗa (second person singular subject pronoun; long form), hiɗa (variant used in the Pular dialect of Futa Jalon)
      • aan (emphatic form) (Maasina)
      • an (emphatic form) (Pular)
      • maaɗa (second person singular possessive pronoun (Adamawa))
      • -maa (second person singular dependent pronoun (Adamawa))

      Galician

      edit

      Etymology 1

      edit

      From Latin ad (to, toward).

      Pronunciation

      edit

      IPA(key): /a̝/

      Preposition

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      a

      1. to, toward; indicating direction of motion
      2. introducing an indirect object
      3. used to indicate the time of an action
      4. (with de) to, until; used to indicate the end of a range
        de cinco a oitofrom five to eight
      5. by, on, by means of; expresses a mode of action
        aon foot
      6. for; indicates price or cost
      Usage notes
      edit

      The preposition a regularly forms contractions when it precedes the definite article o, a, os, and as. For example, a o ("to the") contracts to ao or ó, and a a ("to the") contracts to á.

      Derived terms
      edit
      at/to + the table
      - Singular Plural
      Masculine ao (ó) aos (ós)
      Feminine á ás

      Etymology 2

      edit

      From Old Galician-Portuguese a, from Latin illa, feminine of ille (that).

      Pronunciation

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      IPA(key): /a̝/

      Article

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      a f (masculine singular o, feminine plural as, masculine plural os)

      1. (definite) the
      Usage notes
      edit

      The definite article o (in all its forms) regularly forms contractions when it follows the prepositions a (to), con (with), de (of, from), and en (in). For example, con a (with the) contracts to coa, and en a (in the) contracts to na.

      Also, the definite article presents a second form that could be represented as <-lo/-la/-los/-las>, or either lack any specific representation. Its origin is in the assimilation of the last consonant of words ended in -s or -r, due to sandhi, with the /l/ present in the article in pre-Galician-Portuguese period. So Vou comer o caldo or Vou come-lo caldo are representations of /ˈβowˈkomelo̝ˈkaldo̝/ ("I'm going to have my soup"). This phenomenon, rare in Portuguese, is already documented in 13th century Medieval Galician texts, as the Cantigas de Santa Maria.[1]

      Derived terms
      edit

      Etymology 3

      edit

      Pronunciation

      edit

      IPA(key): /ˈa/

      Noun

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      a m (plural as)

      1. a (name of the letter A, a)

      Etymology 4

      edit

      See the etymology of the corresponding lemma form.

      Pronoun

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      a

      1. accusative of ela
      Usage notes
      edit

      Due to sandhi, the accusative form o (in all its forms) regularly changes to -lo after verbal forms ended in r or s, and to -no after verbal forms ended in a semivowel:

      • Eu apagueina 'I quenched it' < apaguei‿a
      • Ti apagáchela 'You quenched it' < apagaches‿a
      • El apagouna 'He quenched it' < apagou‿a
      • Nós apagámola 'We quenched it' < apagamos‿a
      • Temos de apagala 'We must quench it' < apagar‿a

      References

      edit
      1. ^ Vaz Leão, Ângela (2000) “Questões de linguagem nas Cantigas de Santa Maria, de Afonso X”, in Scripta[1], volume 4, number 7, →DOI, retrieved 16 November 2017, pages 11-24

      German

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      Etymology 1

      edit

      Pronunciation

      edit

      Letter

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      a (lower case, upper case A)

      1. The first letter of the German alphabet, written in the Latin script.

      Noun

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      a n (strong, genitive a or as, plural a or as)

      1. Alternative form of A

      Etymology 2

      edit

      Noun

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      a

      1. Abbreviation of a-Moll.
      2. Abbreviation of Ar.

      Gilbertese

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      Etymology

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      From Proto-Oceanic *pat, from Proto-Malayo-Polynesian *əpat, from Proto-Austronesian *Səpat.

      Pronunciation

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      Numeral

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      a

      1. four

      Gothic

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      Romanization

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      a

      1. Romanization of 𐌰

      Grass Koiari

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      Pronoun

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      a

      1. you (singular)

      References

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      • 2010, Terry Crowley & Claire Bowern, An Introduction to Historical Linguistics, fourth edition, Oxford University Press, →ISBN, page 142.

      Etymology

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      Cognates include Fon à.

      Pronunciation

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      Pronoun

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      à

      1. you (second-person singular subject pronoun)

      See also

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      Gungbe personal pronouns
      Number Person Emphatic Pronoun Subject Pronoun Object Pronoun Possessive Determiner
      Singular First nyɛ́, yẹ́n ùn, n mi , ṣié
      Second jɛ̀, jẹ̀, yẹ̀, hiẹ̀ à tòwè
      Third éɔ̀, úɔ̀, éwọ̀ é è étɔ̀n, étọ̀n
      Plural First mílɛ́, mílẹ́ mítɔ̀n, mítọ̀n
      Second mìlɛ́, mìlẹ́ mìtɔ̀n, mìtọ̀n
      Third yélɛ́, yélẹ́ yétɔ̀n, yétọ̀n

      Haitian Creole

      edit

      Pronunciation

      edit

      IPA(key): /a/

      Article

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      a

      1. the, definite article

      Usage notes

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      This term only follows words that end with an oral (non-nasal) consonant and an oral vowel in that order, and can only modify singular nouns.

      See also

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      Hawaiian

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      Pronunciation

      edit

      Conjunction

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      a

      1. and (used between sentences)
      2. until, up to

      Preposition

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      a

      1. of, belonging to

      Usage notes

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      • Used for acquired possessions, while o is used for possessions that are inherited, out of personal control, and for things that can be got into (houses, clothes, cars).

      Hokkien

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      For pronunciation and definitions of a – see .
      (This term is the pe̍h-ōe-jī form of ).

      Hungarian

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      Etymology 1

      edit

      See az.

      Pronunciation

      edit

      Article

      edit

      a (definite)

      1. the
        a hölgythe lady
      2. (before some time phrases) this
        a héten(during) this week
        a télen(in) this winter
      Usage notes
      edit

      Used before words starting with a consonant.

      edit
      • az (for words starting with a vowel sound)

      Pronoun

      edit

      a (demonstrative)

      1. (in reduplicated constructions formed with postpositions) that
        A mellett a ház mellett vártam rá.I waited for him/her next to that house.

      Determiner

      edit

      a (demonstrative)

      1. (rare, only in consonant-initial fixed phrases, with zero article) Alternative form of az (that).
        Foglalja össze, miről szóltak az a heti beszédek és leckék.[1]Summarize what that week’s sermons and lessons were about.
        November 12-én, az a havi frissítőkedden jelenhet meg.It may be released on November 12th, on the Patch Tuesday of that month.
        Kérjük szíves tájékoztatásukat a tekintetben, hogy… (abban a tekintetben, see az)We kindly request your information in that [= the] aspect…
        amondó vagyok, hogy…I am of the opinion that…, what/all I can / want to say is that… (literally, “I am that-sayer/-saying…”)

      Etymology 2

      edit

      Pronunciation

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      • (letter or phoneme itself): IPA(key): [ˈɒː][2]
      • (identifier or musical note): IPA(key): [ˈaː] (in the names of minor scales; see also A)

      Letter

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      a (lower case, upper case A)

      1. The first letter of the Hungarian alphabet, written in the Latin script.
      2. (music) designation of the sixth note from C and the corresponding tone
      Derived terms
      edit

      See also

      edit

      References

      edit
      1. ^ a heti at e-nyelv.hu
      2. ^ Siptár, Péter and Miklós Törkenczy. The Phonology of Hungarian. The Phonology of the World’s Languages. Oxford University Press, 2007. →ISBN, p. 280

      Further reading

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      Icelandic

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      Pronunciation

      edit

      Letter

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      a (upper case A)

      1. The first letter of the Icelandic alphabet, written in the Latin script.

      Noun

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      a ?

      1. The name of the Latin-script letter A.

      See also

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      Pronunciation

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      • (context pronunciation, letter name) IPA(key): /a/

      Letter

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      a (lower case, upper case A)

      1. The first letter of the Ido alphabet, written in the Latin script.

      See also

      edit

      Noun

      edit

      a (plural a-i)

      1. The name of the Latin script letter A/a.

      See also

      edit

      Preposition

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      a

      1. Apocopic form of ad
      edit
      • e (and)
      • o (or)

      Igbo

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      Letter

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      a (upper case A, lower case a)

      1. The first letter of the Igbo alphabet, written in the Latin script.

      Etymology 1

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      Alternative forms

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      • e (neutral tongue position)

      Pronunciation

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      Pronoun

      edit

      a

      1. (indefinite) somebody, one, they, people (an unspecified individual).
        A gwara ya ka ọ bịa.
        He/she was told to come.
      Usage notes
      edit
      • Often gets translated into English with the passive voice.
      See also
      edit

      Etymology 2

      edit

      Pronunciation

      edit

      Determiner

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      a

      1. this.
      edit

      Indo-Portuguese

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      Etymology

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      From Portuguese a.

      Pronunciation

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      • (Sri Lankan Creole) IPA(key): /a/, /ə/

      Preposition

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      a

      1. to
        • 1883, Hugo Schuchardt, Kreolische Studien, volume 3 (overall work in German):
          [] , que da-cá su quião que ta pertencê a êll.
          [] , to give him his share which belongs to him.

      Indonesian

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      Pronunciation

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      Letter

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      a (lower case, upper case A)

      1. The first letter of the Indonesian alphabet, called a and written in the Latin script.
      2. The name of the Latin-script letter A/a.

      See also

      edit

      Further reading

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      Ingrian

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      Etymology

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      Borrowed from Russian а (a).

      Pronunciation

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      Conjunction

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      a

      1. and, but
        • 1936, N. A. Iljin and V. I. Junus, Bukvari iƶoroin șkouluja vart, Leningrad: Riikin Ucebno-pedagogiceskoi Izdateljstva, page 17:
          A siä Jaakko, kuhu määt?
          And you Jaakko, where are you going?
        • 1936, L. G. Terehova, V. G. Erdeli, translated by Mihailov and P. I. Maksimov, Geografia: oppikirja iƶoroin alkușkoulun kolmatta klaassaa vart (ensimäine osa), Leningrad: Riikin Ucebno-Pedagogiceskoi Izdateljstva, page 7:
          keskipäivääl hää [päivyt] on kaikkiin ylemmääl, a siis alkaa laskiissa.
          on midday it [the Sun] is highest, and then it starts to descend.

      References

      edit
      • Ruben E. Nirvi (1971) Inkeroismurteiden Sanakirja, Helsinki: Suomalais-Ugrilainen Seura, page 1
      • Arvo Laanest (1997) Isuri keele Hevaha murde sõnastik, Eesti Keele Instituut, page 15

      Interlingua

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      Pronunciation

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      Preposition

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      a

      1. to, at
      2. to, for (indicating purpose)
        sala a attenderwaiting room

      Derived terms

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      Inupiaq

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      Pronunciation

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      Interjection

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      a

      1. listen, hark
      2. oops (used to acknowledge an error)
      3. oh (used to express surprise)

      Irish

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      Pronunciation

      edit

      Etymology 1

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      From Old Irish a, from Proto-Celtic *esyo (the final vowel triggering lenition), feminine Proto-Celtic *esyās (the final -s triggering h-prothesis), plural Proto-Celtic *ēsom (the final nasal triggering eclipsis), all from the genitive forms of Proto-Indo-European *éy. Cognate with Welsh ei.

      Determiner

      edit

      a (triggers lenition)

      1. his, its
        a athair agus a mháthairhis father and mother
        Chaill an t-éan a chleití.
        The bird lost its feathers.

      Determiner

      edit

      a (triggers h-prothesis)

      1. her, its
        a hathair agus a máthairher father and mother
        Bhris an mheaig a heiteog.
        The magpie broke its wing.

      Determiner

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      a (triggers eclipsis)

      1. their
        a n-athair agus a máthairtheir father and mother
        a dtithetheir houses
        a n-ainmneachatheir names
      2. (Connacht) our
      3. (Connacht) your (plural)
      See also
      edit

      Determiner

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      a (triggers lenition)

      1. how (used with an abstract noun)
        A ghéire a labhair sí!
        How sharply she spoke!
        A fheabhas atá sé!
        How good it is!

      Etymology 2

      edit

      A reduced form of older do (itself a reanalysis of do used in past tenses, and also present in early modern verbs like do-bheirim (I give), do-chím (I see)), or from the preverb a- in early modern verbs like a-tú (I am), a-deirim (I say) in relative clauses.

      Particle

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      a (triggers lenition except of d’ and of past autonomous forms)

      1. introduces a direct relative clause, takes the independent form of an irregular verb
        an fear a chuireann síolthe man who sows seed
        an síol a chuireann an fearthe seed that the man sows
        an síol a cuireadhthe seed that was sown
        nuair a bhí mé ógwhen I was young
        an cat a d'ól an bainnethe cat that drank the milk

      References

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      • Gerald O’Nolan (1920) Studies in Modern Irish[15], volume 1, pages 89, 93–94

      Etymology 3

      edit

      From Old Irish a (that, which the relative particle used after prepositions), reanalyzed as an independent indirect relative particle from forms like ar a (on which, on whom), (to which, to whom), or early modern le a (with which, with whom), agá (at which, at whom) when prepositional pronouns started to be repeated in such clauses (eg. don té agá mbíon cloidheamh (…) aige, daoine agá mbíonn grádh aco do Dhia). Compare the forms used in Munster instead: go (from agá (at which)) and na (from i n-a (in which), go n-a (with which), ria n-a (before which) and later lena (with which), tréna (through which)).

      Particle

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      a (triggers eclipsis, takes the dependent form of an irregular verb; not used in the past tense except with some irregular verbs)

      1. introduces an indirect relative clause
        an bord a raibh leabhar airthe table on which there was a book
        an fear a bhfuil a mhac ag imeachtthe man whose son is going away
      edit
      • ar (used with the past tense of regular and some irregular verbs)

      Pronoun

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      a (triggers eclipsis, takes the dependent form of an irregular verb; not used in the past tense except with some irregular verbs)

      1. all that, whatever
        Sin a bhfuil ann.
        That's all that is there.
        An bhfuair tú a raibh uait?
        Did you get all that you wanted?
        Íocfaidh mé as a gceannóidh tú.
        I will pay for whatever you buy.
      edit
      • ar (used with the past tense of regular and some irregular verbs)

      References

      edit
      • Nicholas Williams (1994) “Na Canúintí a Theacht chun Solais”, in K. McCone, D. McManus, C. Ó Háinle, N. Williams, L. Breatnach, editors, Stair na Gaeilge: in ómós do P[h]ádraig Ó Fiannachta (in Irish), Maynooth: Roinn na Sean-Ghaeilge, Coláiste Phádraig, →ISBN, page 464:Tháinig nós chun cinn sa 17ú haois freisin an réamhfhocal a dhúbláil: don té agá mbíonn cloidheamh..aige; daoine agá mbíonn grádh aco do Dhia (Ó Cuív, 1952b, 177), an tí ag a bhfuil a bheag do chuntabhairt aige (Williams, 1986, 155).
      • Gerald O’Nolan (1934) The New Era Grammar of Modern Irish, The Educational Company of Ireland Ltd., page 56

      Etymology 4

      edit

      Particle

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      a (triggers lenition)

      1. introduces a vocative
        A Dhia!
        O God!
        A dhuine uasail!
        Sir!
        Tar isteach, a Sheáin.
        Come in, Seán.
        A amadáin!
        You fool!

      Etymology 5

      edit

      Particle

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      a (triggers h-prothesis)

      1. introduces a numeral
        a haon, a dó, a trí...one, two, three...
        Séamas aJames the Second
        bus a seachtbus seven

      Etymology 6

      edit

      Originally a reduced form of do.

      Preposition

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      a (plus dative, triggers lenition)

      1. to (used with verbal nouns)
        síol a churto sow seed
        uisce a ólto drink water
        an rud atá sé a scríobhwhat he is writing
        D’éirigh sé a chaint.
        He rose to speak.
        Téigh a chodladh.
        Go to sleep.

      Mutation

      edit
      Irish mutation
      Radical Eclipsis with h-prothesis with t-prothesis
      a n-a ha not applicable
      Note: Some of these forms may be hypothetical. Not every possible mutated form of every word actually occurs.

      Further reading

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      Istriot

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      Etymology

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      From Latin ad.

      Preposition

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      a

      1. at
        • 1877, Antonio Ive, Canti popolari istriani: raccolti a Rovigno, volume 5, Ermanno Loescher, page 99:
          A poûpa, a prùa a xì doûto bandere,
          At the stern, at the bow everything is flags,

      Particle

      edit

      a

      1. emphasises a verb; mandatory with impersonal verbs
        • 1877, Antonio Ive, Canti popolari istriani: raccolti a Rovigno, volume 5, Ermanno Loescher, page 99:
          A poûpa, a prùa a xì doûto bandere,
          At the stern, at the bow everything is flags,

      Italian

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      Pronunciation

      edit

      Etymology 1

      edit

      From Latin ā (the name of the letter A).

      Letter

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      a f or m (invariable, lower case, upper case A)

      1. The first letter of the Italian alphabet, called a and written in the Latin script.

      Noun

      edit

      a f (invariable)

      1. The name of the Latin-script letter A/a.; a
      See also
      edit

      Etymology 2

      edit

      From Latin ad. In a few phrases, a stems from Latin ā, ab.

      Preposition

      edit

      a

      1. Indicates the indirect object. to
        Porta questo cesto alla nonna.
        Bring this basket to grandma.
        Ai gatti piacciono i pesci.
        Cats like fish.
        (literally, “Fish are pleasable to cats.”)
        E lo chiedi a me?
        You're asking that to me?
      2. Indicates the place, used in some contexts, in others in is used. in, to
        Andiamo a casa?
        Can we go home?
        (literally, “Can we go to home?”)
        Ora sto a Palermo, a Roma ci torno domani.
        I'm in Palermo now, I'll go back to Rome tomorrow.
      3. Denotes the manner. with
        appena, a nuoto, a piedi, a casoalmost, swimming, by foot, randomly
      4. Forms adverbs meaning in a manner related or resembling ~.
        a cappella, a bestia, a braccio, a pennello, etc.(please add an English translation of this usage example)
      5. Forms goodbye formulas from the time the persons will meet again. see you...
        A domani!See you tomorrow!
        A dopo!See you later!
        Al prossimo Natale!See you next Christmas!
      6. Introduces the ingredients of a dish, perfume, etc. with
        pasta all'uovopasta with eggs
        cornetto al cioccolatochocolate croissant
        shampoo al limonelemon shampoo
        patatine alla pizzapizza-flavoured crisps
      7. (central-southern Italy) Denotes the direct object, but only if it's not preceded by articles
        Chiama a Paolo.
        Call Paolo.
        E non ci avevi visto a noi?
        And you didn't see us?
        the "us" here is repeated twice for emphasis
        Ascolti a me, signó!
        Listen to me, ma'am!
      8. (followed by the definite article) Forms an interjection that gives an instruction or calls attention to something.
        Al ladro!Thief!
        Al fuoco!Fire!
        Al lupo!Wolf!
        All'attacco!Attack!
        All'arrembaggio!Assault! (yelled by pirates)
      9. (regional) Forms continuous tense when preceded by stare and followed by verb infinitives. -ing. The standard language for this scope uses gerunds.
        che stai a di'?what are you saying?
        stavo a dormi'I was sleeping
      10. Repeated indicates the amount by which something grows. by
        a due a duetwo by two; in pairs
        a poco a pocolittle by little
      11. Indicates the agent of a verb in some contexts. by. Sometimes interchangable with da.
        L'ho sentito dire a Livia.
        I heard Livia say it.
        (literally, “I heard it said by Livia.”)
        • c. 1909, Luigi Pirandello, chapter 2.3, in I vecchi e i giovani:
          Mi duole, creda, sinceramente, veder fare a un uomo come lei, per cui ho tanta stima, una figura... non bella, via! non bella.
          (please add an English translation of this quotation)
      Usage notes
      edit
      • When followed by a word that begins with a vowel sound, the form ad is used instead.
      • When followed by the definite article, a combines with the article to produce the following combined forms:
      a + article Combined form
      a + il al
      a + lo allo
      a + l' all'
      a + i ai
      a + gli agli
      a + la alla
      a + le alle
      Descendants
      edit
      • Norwegian Bokmål: a (learned)

      Etymology 3

      edit

      Verb

      edit

      a

      1. Misspelling of ha.

      References

      edit


      Further reading

      edit

      Jamaican Creole

      edit

      Etymology

      edit

      Compare French c’est. (This etymology is missing or incomplete. Please add to it, or discuss it at the Etymology scriptorium.).

      Pronunciation

      edit

      Preposition

      edit

      a

      1. Indicates location: at, in, on.
        • a mi yaad
          at my home
      2. of
        • Yunaitid Stiet a Amoerka
          United States of America
      3. to
        • Dem go a maakit. Mi a-go a skuul.
          They go to the market. I'm going to school.

      Verb

      edit

      a

      1. to be
        • Jumieka a wahn ailan konchri.
          Jamaica is an island country.
        • Wi a api.
          We are happy.
        • Mi a di tiicha.
          I am the teacher.
      2. As a copulative verb:
        1. (with there, or it) to exist.
          • A tuu apruoch tu Ort sayans.
            There are two approaches to Earth science.
      3. As an auxiliary verb:
        1. Used with present participles of verbs to form the continuous aspect.

      Particle

      edit

      a

      1. Habitual present tense marker.
        • wan plies we dem a plie haki mach
          a place where they play hockey matches
      2. Precedes a verb to mark the -ing form.
        • 1968, Beryl Loftman Bailey, Jamaican Creole Language Course: (for English Speaking Students):
          Jan sidong de a laaf.
          Sta Kiet op de-a baal
          John sat there laughing
          Sister Kate is up there crying

      See also

      edit

      Further reading

      edit

      Japanese

      edit

      Romanization

      edit

      a

      1. The hiragana syllable (a) or the katakana syllable (a) in Hepburn romanization.

      Jersey Dutch

      edit

      Pronunciation

      edit
      • (phoneme): IPA(key): /ʊ/, /ɑ/

      Letter

      edit

      a

      1. A letter of the Jersey Dutch alphabet, written in the Latin script.

      Kabuverdianu

      edit

      Letter

      edit

      a (uppercase A)

      1. The first letter of the Kabuverdianu alphabet, written in the Latin script.

      Kabyle

      edit

      Alternative forms

      edit

      Determiner

      edit

      a

      1. this
        a rgaz a
        this man

      Kalasha

      edit

      Etymology

      edit

      From Sanskrit अहम् (ahám).

      Pronoun

      edit

      a (Arabic آ)

      1. I (1st-person personal pronoun)

      See also

      edit

      Kankanaey

      edit

      Etymology 1

      edit

      Borrowed from Tagalog a. Pronunciation is influenced by English a.

      Pronunciation

      edit
      • (Standard Kankanaey) IPA(key): /ˈʔej/ [ˈʔei̯]
      • Rhymes: -ej

      Letter

      edit

      a (lower case, upper case A)

      1. The first letter of the Kankanaey alphabet, called ey and written in the Latin script.
      See also
      edit

      Etymology 2

      edit

      Possibly borrowed from Ilocano a.

      Pronunciation

      edit
      • (Standard Kankanaey) IPA(key): /ʔa/ [ʔʌ]
      • Rhymes: -a
      • Syllabification: a

      Interjection

      edit

      a

      1. hey!; eh!
        Synonym: ay

      Etymology 3

      edit

      Pronunciation

      edit
      • (Standard Kankanaey) IPA(key): /ʔa/ [ʔʌ]
      • Rhymes: -a
      • Syllabification: a

      Noun

      edit

      a

      1. act of getting
        Synonym: ala
      Derived terms
      edit

      Etymology 4

      edit

      Pronunciation

      edit
      • (Standard Kankanaey) IPA(key): /ʔa/ [ʔʌ]
      • Rhymes: -a
      • Syllabification: a

      Particle

      edit

      a

      1. indicates polite, persuasive emphasis
        • 2021, Allen, Larry, “a”, in Kankanaey – English Dictionary[16], Summer Institute of Linguistics:
          Kamán kan adí pinikpík mo? Pinikpík ko a.
          How come it seems like you didn't pat him? I patted him, all right.
      Usage notes
      edit
      • This is used at the end of the sentence.
      See also
      edit

      References

      edit
      • Komisyon ng Wikang Filipino (2016) Ortograpiya di Kankanaëy [Kankanaey Orthography]‎[17] (in Kankanaey and Tagalog), →ISBN, pages 10-11
      • Morice Vanoverbergh (1933) “a”, in A Dictionary of Lepanto Igorot or Kankanay. As it is spoken at Bauco (Linguistische Anthropos-Bibliothek; XII)‎[18] (in English and Kankanaey), Mödling bei Wien, St. Gabriel, Österreich: Verlag der Internationalen Zeitschrift „Anthropos“, →OCLC, page 1
      • Allen, Larry (2021) “a”, in Kankanaey – English Dictionary[19] (in English and Kankanaey), Summer Institute of Linguistics
      • Janet L. Allen (2014) Kankanaey: A Role and Reference Grammar Analysis[20] (overall work in English), →ISBN, page 164

      Kapampangan

      edit

      Ligature

      edit

      a

      1. connects adjectives to nouns
        Romantiku a bengi.
        A romantic night.
        Pinakapalsintan a tau.
        The person I love the most.
        Mayap a abak.
        Good morning.
        Mayap a bengi.
        Good night.
        Dakal a salamat.
        Thank you very much.

      See also

      edit

      Kari'na

      edit

      Pronunciation

      edit

      Interjection

      edit

      a

      1. ah, aah

      References

      edit
      • Courtz, Hendrik (2008) A Carib grammar and dictionary[21], Toronto: Magoria Books, →ISBN, page 213
      • Yamada, Racquel-María (2010) “a”, in Speech community-based documentation, description, and revitalization: Kari’nja in Konomerume[22], University of Oregon, page 707

      Kashubian

      edit

      Pronunciation

      edit
      • IPA(key): /ˈa/
      • Rhymes: -a
      • Syllabification: a

      Etymology 1

      edit

      The Kashubian orthography is based on the Latin alphabet. No earlier script is known. See the Kashubian alphabet article on Wikipedia for more, and a for development of the glyph itself.

      Letter

      edit

      a (lowercase, uppercase A)

      1. The first letter of the Kashubian alphabet, called a and written in the Latin script.

      See also

      edit

      Etymology 2

      edit

      Inherited from Proto-Slavic *a.

      Conjunction

      edit

      a

      1. and (used to continue a previous statement or to add to it)

      Noun

      edit

      a n (indeclinable)

      1. (music) a (note)

      Etymology 3

      edit

      Inherited from Proto-Slavic *a.

      Interjection

      edit

      a

      1. interjection that expresses various emotions; ah!

      Further reading

      edit
      • Stefan Ramułt (1893) “a”, in Słownik języka pomorskiego czyli kaszubskiego (in Kashubian), page 1
      • Sychta, Bernard (1967) “a, a!”, in Słownik gwar kaszubskich [Dictionary of Kashubian dialects] (in Polish), volumes 1 (A – Ǵ), Wrocław: Ossolineum, page 1
      • Eùgeniusz Gòłąbk (2011) “a”, in Słownik Polsko-Kaszubski / Słowôrz Pòlskò-Kaszëbsczi[23], volume 1, page 9
      • A, a”, in Internetowi Słowôrz Kaszëbsczégò Jãzëka [Internet Dictionary of the Kashubian Language], Fundacja Kaszuby, 2022
      • a!”, in Internetowi Słowôrz Kaszëbsczégò Jãzëka [Internet Dictionary of the Kashubian Language], Fundacja Kaszuby, 2022

      Kayan

      edit

      Letter

      edit

      a

      1. a the first letter of Kayan alphabet.

      Pronoun

      edit

      a

      1. used for he, she, third person.

      K'iche'

      edit

      Pronunciation

      edit

      Adjective

      edit

      a

      1. masculine youth indicator

      Adverb

      edit

      a

      1. (interrogatory) indicator of a question

      Pronoun

      edit

      a

      1. your

      References

      edit

      Koitabu

      edit

      Pronoun

      edit

      a

      1. you (singular)

      References

      edit
      • Terry Crowley, Claire Bowern, An Introduction to Historical Linguistics

      Krisa

      edit

      Pronunciation

      edit

      IPA(key): /a/

      Noun

      edit

      a m

      1. pig
        Nana a doma.
        I shot your pig.

      References

      edit
      • Donohue, Mark and San Roque, Lila. I'saka: a sketch grammar of a language of north-central New Guinea. (Pacific Linguistics, 554.) (2004).

      Ladin

      edit

      Etymology

      edit

      From Latin a.

      Pronunciation

      edit

      Preposition

      edit

      a

      1. in
      2. at
      3. to

      Derived terms

      edit

      Lashi

      edit

      Pronunciation

      edit

      Adverb

      edit

      a

      1. not

      References

      edit
      • Hkaw Luk (2017) A grammatical sketch of Lacid[24], Chiang Mai: Payap University (master thesis)

      Latgalian

      edit

      Etymology

      edit

      Ultimately from Proto-Balto-Slavic . The source is not clear:

      • Probably borrowed from a Slavic language (compare Russian а (a) and Belarusian а (a)).
      • Alternatively, irregularly shortened from *ā, inherited from .

      Compare Lithuanian o.

      Pronunciation

      edit
      • IPA(key): [ˈa]
      • Hyphenation: a

      Conjunction

      edit

      a f

      1. and, but

      References

      edit
      • A. Andronov, L. Leikuma (2008) Latgalīšu-Latvīšu-Krīvu sarunu vuordineica, Lvava, →ISBN

      Latin

      edit

      Etymology 1

      edit

      From Ancient Greek Α (A, alpha), likely through Etruscan.

      Pronunciation

      edit

      (letter name):

      Letter

      edit

      a (lower case, upper case A)

      1. (sometimes with littera) the first letter of the Latin alphabet.
        littera athe letter a

      Etymology 2

      edit

      From Etruscan.

      Pronunciation

      edit
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Noun

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      Coordinate terms
      edit

      Etymology 3

      edit

      Alternative form of The time allocated for running scripts has expired. by apocope The time allocated for running scripts has expired..

      Alternative forms

      edit
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Pronunciation

      edit
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Preposition

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired. (+ ablative)

      1. The time allocated for running scripts has expired. from, away from, out of
        • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      2. The time allocated for running scripts has expired. down from
      3. The time allocated for running scripts has expired. by, by means of
        • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      4. The time allocated for running scripts has expired. by, by means of, with
      5. The time allocated for running scripts has expired. to, with
        • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      6. The time allocated for running scripts has expired. at, on, in
      7. The time allocated for running scripts has expired. after, since
      Usage notes
      edit

      Used in conjunction with passive verbs to mark the agent.

      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      Derived terms
      edit
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      Descendants
      edit
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Etymology 4

      edit

      Expressive.

      Pronunciation

      edit
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Interjection

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. ah

      Further reading

      edit
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      • a in The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      • a”, in ΛΟΓΕΙΟΝ [Logeion] (in English, French, Spanish, German, Dutch and Chinese), University of Chicago, 2011

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Latvian

      edit

      Etymology

      edit

      Proposed in 1908 as part of the new Latvian spelling by the scientific commission headed by K. Mīlenbahs, which was accepted and began to be taught in schools in 1909. Prior to that, Latvian had been written in German Fraktur, and sporadically in Cyrillic.

      Pronunciation

      edit
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Letter

      edit
       
      A

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.The The time allocated for running scripts has expired. letter of the The time allocated for running scripts has expired. alphabet, written in the Latin script.

      See also

      edit

      Noun

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      See also

      edit

      Further reading

      edit
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Determiner

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Letter

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. The first letter of the Laz alphabet, written in the Latin script.

      See also

      edit
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Numeral

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Ligurian

      edit

      Pronunciation

      edit
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Etymology 1

      edit
      Ligurian Definite Articles
      singular plural
      masculine The time allocated for running scripts has expired. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      feminine  The time allocated for running scripts has expired. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Article

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. the

      Etymology 2

      edit

      From The time allocated for running scripts has expired..

      Preposition

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. in
      2. at
      3. to
        The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      4. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
        The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      The time allocated for running scripts has expired. + article Combined form
      The time allocated for running scripts has expired. + The time allocated for running scripts has expired. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      The time allocated for running scripts has expired. + The time allocated for running scripts has expired. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      The time allocated for running scripts has expired. + The time allocated for running scripts has expired. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      The time allocated for running scripts has expired. + The time allocated for running scripts has expired. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Livonian

      edit

      Pronunciation

      edit
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Letter

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.The The time allocated for running scripts has expired. letter of the The time allocated for running scripts has expired. alphabet, written in the Latin script.


      Louisiana Creole

      edit

      Etymology

      edit

      From The time allocated for running scripts has expired..

      Verb

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. to have

      Lower Sorbian

      edit

      Pronunciation

      edit
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Letter

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.The The time allocated for running scripts has expired. letter of the The time allocated for running scripts has expired. alphabet, called The time allocated for running scripts has expired. and written in the Latin script.
      2. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.The name of the Latin-script letter [[a#The time allocated for running scripts has expired.|a]]/[[A#The time allocated for running scripts has expired.|A]].The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Conjunction

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. and

      See also

      edit

      Further reading

      edit
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Lushootseed

      edit

      Letter

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Malay

      edit

      Pronunciation

      edit
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Letter

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.The The time allocated for running scripts has expired. letter of the The time allocated for running scripts has expired. alphabet, written in the Latin script.

      See also

      edit

      Interjection

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
        The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      2. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.; er, uh.
        The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
        The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Further reading

      edit

      Maltese

      edit

      Pronunciation

      edit
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Letter

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.The The time allocated for running scripts has expired. letter of the The time allocated for running scripts has expired. alphabet, written in the Latin script.

      See also

      edit
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Mandarin

      edit

      Romanization

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. Hanyu Pinyin reading of The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      2. Hanyu Pinyin reading of The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      3. Hanyu Pinyin reading of The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      2. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      3. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      4. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Usage notes

      edit
      • Transcriptions of Mandarin into the Latin script often do not distinguish between the critical tonal differences employed in the Mandarin language, using words such as this one without indication of tone.

      Mandinka

      edit

      Pronoun

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. he, him The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
        The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
        The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      2. she, her The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      3. it The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      See also

      edit

      Maori

      edit

      Particle

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. of
      2. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      3. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Usage notes

      edit
      • When used in the sense of of, suggests that the possessor has control of the relationship (alienable possession).

      Masurian

      edit

      Pronunciation

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Etymology 1

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.The time allocated for running scripts has expired. Inherited from The time allocated for running scripts has expired..

      Conjunction

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. The time allocated for running scripts has expired. and, but, whereas
      2. The time allocated for running scripts has expired. and; at that

      Particle

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Etymology 2

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired. Inherited from The time allocated for running scripts has expired., from The time allocated for running scripts has expired..

      Interjection

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. ah! The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Further reading

      edit
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Mezquital Otomi

      edit

      Etymology 1

      edit

      Pronunciation

      edit
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Interjection

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Etymology 2

      edit

      Alternative forms

      edit
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Pronunciation

      edit
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Verb

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. The time allocated for running scripts has expired. wake, awaken

      Etymology 3

      edit

      From The time allocated for running scripts has expired., from The time allocated for running scripts has expired..

      Alternative forms

      edit
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Pronunciation

      edit
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Noun

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. flea
      Derived terms
      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      References

      edit
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Middle Dutch

      edit

      Etymology

      edit

      From The time allocated for running scripts has expired., from The time allocated for running scripts has expired..

      Noun

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. The time allocated for running scripts has expired. river, stream, water

      Inflection

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      This noun needs an [[:Category:The time allocated for running scripts has expired. noun inflection-table templates|inflection-table template]].

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Descendants

      edit
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Further reading

      edit
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Middle English

      edit

      Etymology 1

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Article

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. The time allocated for running scripts has expired. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Etymology 2

      edit

      Pronoun

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. The time allocated for running scripts has expired. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Etymology 3

      edit

      Pronoun

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Etymology 4

      edit

      Pronoun

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Etymology 5

      edit

      Pronoun

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Etymology 6

      edit

      Numeral

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. The time allocated for running scripts has expired. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Middle French

      edit

      Etymology 1

      edit

      From The time allocated for running scripts has expired., from The time allocated for running scripts has expired..

      Alternative forms

      edit
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Preposition

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. to; towards

      Etymology 2

      edit

      From The time allocated for running scripts has expired., from The time allocated for running scripts has expired..

      Verb

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Middle Scots

      edit

      Etymology 1

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired. from The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Letter

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.The The time allocated for running scripts has expired. letter of the The time allocated for running scripts has expired. alphabet, written in the Latin script.

      Etymology 2

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired. from The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Article

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. a, an (indefinite article)
      2. With numbers (The time allocated for running scripts has expired.)
      Usage notes
      edit
      • This form can be used before consonant and vowels, compare The time allocated for running scripts has expired. which also can be used before vowels (and h) but also before consonants.

      Etymology 3

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired. from The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Alternative forms

      edit
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Interjection

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. ah!

      Etymology 4

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired. from The time allocated for running scripts has expired. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Numeral

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. one
      Alternative forms
      edit
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Etymology 5

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired. from The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Pronoun

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Further reading

      edit

      Middle Welsh

      edit

      Etymology 1

      edit

      Pronunciation

      edit
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Particle

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. O (vocative particle)

      Etymology 2

      edit

      Pronunciation

      edit
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Pronoun

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. who, which, that

      Particle

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Etymology 3

      edit

      Pronunciation

      edit
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Particle

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      2. whether, used to introduce an indirect question

      Etymology 4

      edit

      Reduction of The time allocated for running scripts has expired..

      Pronunciation

      edit
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Preposition

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
        • Pwyll Pendeuic Dyuet:
          The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
          it will be small vengeance if we are burnt or put to death because of the child

      Etymology 5

      edit

      From The time allocated for running scripts has expired..

      Alternative forms

      edit
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Pronunciation

      edit
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Conjunction

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. and

      Etymology 6

      edit

      Alternative forms

      edit
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Pronunciation

      edit
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Preposition

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. with

      Etymology 7

      edit

      From The time allocated for running scripts has expired., from The time allocated for running scripts has expired..

      Alternative forms

      edit
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Pronunciation

      edit
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Verb

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Mutation

      edit
      Middle Welsh mutation
      Radical Soft Nasal H-prothesis
      The time allocated for running scripts has expired. unchanged unchanged The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      Note: Some of these forms may be hypothetical. Not every
      possible mutated form of every word actually occurs.

      Mòcheno

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Etymology

      edit

      From The time allocated for running scripts has expired., from The time allocated for running scripts has expired., from The time allocated for running scripts has expired., from The time allocated for running scripts has expired..

      Article

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. a, an

      References

      edit

      Mopan Maya

      edit

      Article

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. the

      References

      edit
      • Hofling, Charles Andrew (2011). Mopan Maya–Spanish–English Dictionary, University of Utah Press.

      Mountain Koiari

      edit

      Pronoun

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. you (singular)

      References

      edit
      • Terry Crowley, Claire Bowern, An Introduction to Historical Linguistics

      Murui Huitoto

      edit

      Adverb

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      References

      edit
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Nauruan

      edit

      Pronunciation

      edit
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Pronoun

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. I The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
        • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
          The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
          []
          The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
          []
          The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
          []
          The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      edit

      Letter

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.The The time allocated for running scripts has expired. letter of the The time allocated for running scripts has expired. alphabet, written in the Latin script.
        a = The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
        ą = The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
        á = The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
        ą́ = The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
        aa = The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
        ąą = The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
        áa = The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
        ą́ą = The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
        aá = The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
        ąą́ = The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
        áá = The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
        ą́ą́ = The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      See also

      edit
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Neapolitan

      edit

      Pronunciation

      edit
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Etymology 1

      edit

      From The time allocated for running scripts has expired. The time allocated for running scripts has expired..

      Preposition

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. from (referring to a place)
      2. by (introducing the actor in the passive voice)
      3. to (implying necessity)

      Etymology 2

      edit

      From The time allocated for running scripts has expired..

      Preposition

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. in (locative: staying in a place of relative width)
      2. to (locative: moving towards a place of relative width)
      3. to (dative)

      Nias

      edit

      Etymology

      edit

      From The time allocated for running scripts has expired., from The time allocated for running scripts has expired..

      Verb

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. The time allocated for running scripts has expired. to eat

      References

      edit
      • Sundermann, Heinrich. 1905. Niassisch-deutsches Wörterbuch. Moers: Bataviaasch Genootschap van Kunsten en Wetenschappen, p. 15.

      Norman

      edit

      Verb

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. The time allocated for running scripts has expired. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Norwegian Bokmål

      edit
       
      The letter a from the Norwegian alphabet.

      Etymology 1

      edit

      From The time allocated for running scripts has expired., from The time allocated for running scripts has expired. The time allocated for running scripts has expired., likely through the The time allocated for running scripts has expired. language, from The time allocated for running scripts has expired. The time allocated for running scripts has expired., from Proto-Canaanite  , from Proto-Sinaitic  , from The time allocated for running scripts has expired. The time allocated for running scripts has expired., representing the head of an ox.

      Pronunciation

      edit
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Letter

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.The The time allocated for running scripts has expired. letter of the The time allocated for running scripts has expired. alphabet, written in the Latin script.
      See also
      edit

      Noun

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. the letter The time allocated for running scripts has expired., the first letter of the Norwegian alphabet
        The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
        The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
        The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
        • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      2. indicates the first or best entry of a list, order or rank
        The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
        The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
        The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
        The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
        The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
        The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
        The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
        The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
        • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
        • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
        • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
        • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      3. the highest grade in a school or university using the A-F scale
        The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
        • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      4. The time allocated for running scripts has expired. designation of the sixth note from C and the corresponding tone
        The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
        The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
        • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
        • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
        • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      5. The time allocated for running scripts has expired. symbol for ampere
      6. The time allocated for running scripts has expired. symbol for nucleon number
      7. The time allocated for running scripts has expired. symbol for avance
      8. symbol for The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      9. short form of The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
        The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
        The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Derived terms

      edit
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired., The time allocated for running scripts has expired., The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Etymology 2

      edit

      Abbreviation of The time allocated for running scripts has expired..

      Symbol

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. atto-, prefix for 10-18 in the International System of Units.

      Etymology 3

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired. Abbreviation of The time allocated for running scripts has expired..

      Symbol

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. an are, a unit of area one hundredth of a hectare; ares
        The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Etymology 4

      edit

      From The time allocated for running scripts has expired..

      Preposition

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      Alternative forms
      edit
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Etymology 5

      edit

      From The time allocated for running scripts has expired., alternative form of The time allocated for running scripts has expired..

      Preposition

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. (used in Latin expressions, before a consonant) from, of
        The time allocated for running scripts has expired., The time allocated for running scripts has expired., The time allocated for running scripts has expired., The time allocated for running scripts has expired., The time allocated for running scripts has expired., The time allocated for running scripts has expired., The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      Alternative forms
      edit
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Etymology 6

      edit

      From The time allocated for running scripts has expired..

      Preposition

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. (used in Italian expressions, before a consonant) from, of, with
        The time allocated for running scripts has expired., The time allocated for running scripts has expired., The time allocated for running scripts has expired., The time allocated for running scripts has expired., The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      2. weak form of av (of)

      Etymology 7

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired. From The time allocated for running scripts has expired., accusative form of The time allocated for running scripts has expired., from The time allocated for running scripts has expired., from a prefixed form of The time allocated for running scripts has expired., from The time allocated for running scripts has expired..

      Pronoun

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. (dialectal, used enclitically after a conjunction or subjunction) she
        • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
        • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      2. (dialectal, about grammatically feminine animals or objects) it, she
        • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
        • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
        hvor er a katta di?
        where is your cat?
        The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      3. (dialectal, used enclitically) her; object form of The time allocated for running scripts has expired. (=she)
        hva gjorde du med a?
        what did you do to her?
        • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
        • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
        • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
        • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
        • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      4. (dialectal, about grammatically feminine animals or objects) it, her
        hvis katta stikker av, må du fange a!
        if the cat runs away, you need to catch her!
        • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
        The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      5. (dialectal, used proclitically with a woman's name or female relation) she, her
        • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
        • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
        • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
        • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Etymology 8

      edit

      From The time allocated for running scripts has expired., likely from The time allocated for running scripts has expired., from The time allocated for running scripts has expired., from The time allocated for running scripts has expired.. Also see The time allocated for running scripts has expired. and The time allocated for running scripts has expired..

      Interjection

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
        The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
        • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      2. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
        The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
        • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      3. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
        The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
        • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
        • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
        • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Etymology 9

      edit

      Mostly likely from Norwegian The time allocated for running scripts has expired., from The time allocated for running scripts has expired., from The time allocated for running scripts has expired., from The time allocated for running scripts has expired., from The time allocated for running scripts has expired., from The time allocated for running scripts has expired..

      Interjection

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
        uff a meg!
        oh, my!
        huff a meg!
        oh, no!
      Alternative forms
      edit
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      References

      edit
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      • a” in Store norske leksikon
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Anagrams

      edit
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Norwegian Nynorsk

      edit

      Etymology 1

      edit

      Pronunciation

      edit
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Letter

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.The The time allocated for running scripts has expired. letter of the The time allocated for running scripts has expired. alphabet, written in the Latin script.
      See also
      edit

      Noun

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. the letter a

      Etymology 2

      edit

      Interjection

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. ah!
        The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Etymology 3

      edit

      From The time allocated for running scripts has expired., from The time allocated for running scripts has expired., from The time allocated for running scripts has expired..

      Preposition

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. The time allocated for running scripts has expired. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
        • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      References

      edit
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Nupe

      edit

      Etymology 1

      edit

      Pronunciation

      edit
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Letter

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.The The time allocated for running scripts has expired. letter of the The time allocated for running scripts has expired. alphabet, written in the Latin script.
      See also
      edit
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Etymology 2

      edit

      Pronunciation

      edit
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Particle

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. not (The time allocated for running scripts has expired.)
        The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Etymology 3

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Pronunciation

      edit
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Particle

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      Usage notes
      edit

      á, which is derived from the verb The time allocated for running scripts has expired., functions like a verb so that the word order in the present perfect tense is that of a serial verb construction.

      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Etymology 4

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Pronunciation

      edit
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Particle

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. The time allocated for running scripts has expired. (The time allocated for running scripts has expired.)
        The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Occitan

      edit

      Pronunciation

      edit
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Etymology 1

      edit

      From The time allocated for running scripts has expired..

      Preposition

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. to
      2. at
      Derived terms
      edit
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired., The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Etymology 2

      edit

      Noun

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. a (the letter a)

      Etymology 3

      edit

      Verb

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Old Czech

      edit

      Pronunciation

      edit
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Etymology 1

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired. Inherited from The time allocated for running scripts has expired., from The time allocated for running scripts has expired..

      Interjection

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. ah!
      Descendants
      edit
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Etymology 2

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.The time allocated for running scripts has expired. Inherited from The time allocated for running scripts has expired., from The time allocated for running scripts has expired..

      Particle

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.; and
      2. then, as, if
      3. yes, of course

      Conjunction

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. and (The time allocated for running scripts has expired.)
      2. and, but, whereas (The time allocated for running scripts has expired.)
      Descendants
      edit
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      References

      edit
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Old Danish

      edit

      Alternative forms

      edit
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Pronunciation

      edit
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Etymology 1

      edit

      From The time allocated for running scripts has expired., from The time allocated for running scripts has expired..

      Noun

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. The time allocated for running scripts has expired. stream, river
      Descendants
      edit
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Etymology 2

      edit

      From The time allocated for running scripts has expired., from The time allocated for running scripts has expired..

      Preposition

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. The time allocated for running scripts has expired. on, in, at
      Descendants
      edit
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Etymology 3

      edit

      Verb

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Old Dutch

      edit

      Etymology

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired. From The time allocated for running scripts has expired..

      Noun

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. river, stream, water

      Inflection

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      This noun needs an [[:Category:The time allocated for running scripts has expired. noun inflection-table templates|inflection-table template]].

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Alternative forms

      edit
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Descendants

      edit
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
        • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Further reading

      edit
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Old English

      edit

      Alternative forms

      edit
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired., The time allocated for running scripts has expired., The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Etymology

      edit

      From The time allocated for running scripts has expired., from The time allocated for running scripts has expired..

      Pronunciation

      edit
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Adverb

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. ever, always

      References

      edit
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired..

      Etymology 2

      edit

      Noun

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.: law

      References

      edit
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired..

      Etymology 3

      edit

      Pronunciation

      edit
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Preposition

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.: to, in

      References

      edit
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired..

      Old French

      edit

      Etymology 1

      edit

      Letter

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.The The time allocated for running scripts has expired. letter of the The time allocated for running scripts has expired. alphabet, written in the Latin script.

      Etymology 2

      edit

      From The time allocated for running scripts has expired..

      Alternative forms

      edit
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Preposition

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. to
      2. towards
      3. belonging to
        The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      Derived terms
      edit
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      Descendants
      edit
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Etymology 3

      edit

      Alternative forms

      edit
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Verb

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Etymology 4

      edit

      From The time allocated for running scripts has expired..

      Adverb

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. by, by means of

      Old Galician-Portuguese

      edit

      Pronunciation

      edit
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Etymology 1

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired. from The time allocated for running scripts has expired..

      Preposition

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. to; towards
        • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
          fugiu con el a Egipto. terra de Reẏ faraon.
          ran away with him to Egypt. land of King pharaoh.

      Descendants

      edit
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Etymology 2

      edit

      See the etymology of the corresponding lemma form.

      Article

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Old Irish

      edit

      Pronunciation

      edit
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Etymology 1

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired. From The time allocated for running scripts has expired..

      Alternative forms

      edit
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Article

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      For quotations using this term, see [[Citations:a#The time allocated for running scripts has expired.|Citations:a]].

      Pronoun

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. The time allocated for running scripts has expired. that which, what

      For quotations using this term, see [[Citations:a#The time allocated for running scripts has expired.|Citations:a]].

      Descendants
      edit
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Further reading

      edit
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Etymology 2

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      This etymology is missing or incomplete. Please add to it, or discuss it at the Etymology scriptorium.

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Conjunction

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. when

      For quotations using this term, see [[Citations:a#The time allocated for running scripts has expired.|Citations:a]].

      Etymology 3

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired. From The time allocated for running scripts has expired. (The time allocated for running scripts has expired. and The time allocated for running scripts has expired.), The time allocated for running scripts has expired. (The time allocated for running scripts has expired.), and The time allocated for running scripts has expired. (The time allocated for running scripts has expired.), from The time allocated for running scripts has expired., genitive singular of The time allocated for running scripts has expired. and The time allocated for running scripts has expired.; compare The time allocated for running scripts has expired., The time allocated for running scripts has expired.; Old High German The time allocated for running scripts has expired.; and The time allocated for running scripts has expired., The time allocated for running scripts has expired., and The time allocated for running scripts has expired..

      Alternative forms

      edit
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired., The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Determiner

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. his, its
      2. her, its
      3. their

      For quotations using this term, see [[Citations:a#The time allocated for running scripts has expired.|Citations:a]].

      Descendants
      edit
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.; The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Further reading

      edit
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Etymology 4

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired. From The time allocated for running scripts has expired. (compare The time allocated for running scripts has expired.), from The time allocated for running scripts has expired. (compare The time allocated for running scripts has expired., The time allocated for running scripts has expired.).

      Alternative forms

      edit
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Particle

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. O (The time allocated for running scripts has expired.)

      For quotations using this term, see [[Citations:a#The time allocated for running scripts has expired.|Citations:a]].

      Descendants
      edit
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Further reading

      edit
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Etymology 5

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Particle

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
        The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      Descendants
      edit
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Further reading

      edit
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Etymology 6

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired. From The time allocated for running scripts has expired., from The time allocated for running scripts has expired..

      Preposition

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. out of

      For quotations using this term, see [[Citations:a#The time allocated for running scripts has expired.|Citations:a]].

      Inflection
      edit
      edit
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      Descendants
      edit
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Further reading

      edit
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Old Polish

      edit

      Pronunciation

      edit
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Etymology 1

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired. Inherited from The time allocated for running scripts has expired.. First attested in first half of 14th century.

      Interjection

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. ah! (The time allocated for running scripts has expired.)
      Descendants
      edit
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Etymology 2

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.The time allocated for running scripts has expired. Inherited from The time allocated for running scripts has expired., from The time allocated for running scripts has expired.. First attested in first half of 14th century.

      Conjunction

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. and (The time allocated for running scripts has expired.)
      2. and, but, whereas (The time allocated for running scripts has expired.)
      3. and then (The time allocated for running scripts has expired.)
      4. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      5. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Descendants
      edit
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      References

      edit
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Old Swedish

      edit

      Alternative forms

      edit
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Etymology

      edit

      From The time allocated for running scripts has expired., from The time allocated for running scripts has expired..

      Pronunciation

      edit
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Noun

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. creek, river

      Declension

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Descendants

      edit
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      References

      edit

      Omaha-Ponca

      edit

      Noun

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. arm

      References

      edit

      Ometepec Nahuatl

      edit

      Noun

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. water

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Oromo

      edit

      Noun

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.The The time allocated for running scripts has expired. letter of the The time allocated for running scripts has expired. alphabet, written in the Latin script.

      Palauan

      edit

      Etymology 1

      edit

      From Pre-Palauan *a, from The time allocated for running scripts has expired..

      Article

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. a, the

      Etymology 2

      edit

      From Pre-Palauan *a, from The time allocated for running scripts has expired., from The time allocated for running scripts has expired..

      Conjunction

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Papiamentu

      edit

      Etymology 1

      edit

      Letter

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.The The time allocated for running scripts has expired. letter of the The time allocated for running scripts has expired. alphabet, written in the Latin script.

      Etymology 2

      edit

      Particle

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. The time allocated for running scripts has expired..
        The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Etymology 3

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired. From The time allocated for running scripts has expired..

      Preposition

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. to
      2. by
      3. at
      Usage notes
      edit
      • Only used in set expressions from Spanish.

      Polish

      edit

      Pronunciation

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Etymology 1

      edit

      The Polish orthography is based on the Latin alphabet. No earlier script is known. See the history of Polish orthography article on Wikipedia for more, and The time allocated for running scripts has expired. for development of the glyph itself.

      Letter

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.The The time allocated for running scripts has expired. letter of the The time allocated for running scripts has expired. alphabet, written in the Latin script.
        The time allocated for running scripts has expired.The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
        The time allocated for running scripts has expired.The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      See also
      edit

      Etymology 2

      edit

      First attested in 1551.[1] The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      This etymology is missing or incomplete. Please add to it, or discuss it at the Etymology scriptorium.

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Noun

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. The time allocated for running scripts has expired., near-open central vowel
        The time allocated for running scripts has expired.The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
        The time allocated for running scripts has expired.The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      2. The time allocated for running scripts has expired. The time allocated for running scripts has expired. (The time allocated for running scripts has expired.)
        The time allocated for running scripts has expired.The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
        The time allocated for running scripts has expired.The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Etymology 3

      edit

      Abbreviation of The time allocated for running scripts has expired..

      Noun

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. The time allocated for running scripts has expired. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Etymology 4

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.The time allocated for running scripts has expired. Inherited from The time allocated for running scripts has expired..

      Conjunction

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. and, but, whereas (The time allocated for running scripts has expired.)
        The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
        The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      2. and (The time allocated for running scripts has expired.)
        The time allocated for running scripts has expired.The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      3. and then (The time allocated for running scripts has expired.)
        The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      4. and (The time allocated for running scripts has expired.)
        The time allocated for running scripts has expired.The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      5. such and such (The time allocated for running scripts has expired.)
      6. is (The time allocated for running scripts has expired.)
      7. what about
        The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      Derived terms
      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Etymology 5

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.The time allocated for running scripts has expired. Inherited from The time allocated for running scripts has expired..

      Interjection

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. ah! (The time allocated for running scripts has expired.)

      Trivia

      edit

      According to Słownik frekwencyjny polszczyzny współczesnej (1990), a is one of the most used words in Polish, appearing 555 times in scientific texts, 307 times in news, 507 times in essays, 703 times in fiction, and 1175 times in plays, each out of a corpus of 100,000 words, totaling 3226 times, making it the The time allocated for running scripts has expired. most common word in a corpus of 500,000 words.[2]

      References

      edit
      1. ^ The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      2. ^ The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Further reading

      edit
      • a in Wielki słownik języka polskiego, Instytut Języka Polskiego PAN
      • a in Polish dictionaries at PWN
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Portuguese

      edit

      Pronunciation

      edit
      letter
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      article, pronoun
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Etymology 1

      edit

      From The time allocated for running scripts has expired., form of The time allocated for running scripts has expired., from The time allocated for running scripts has expired., from The time allocated for running scripts has expired., from The time allocated for running scripts has expired., from The time allocated for running scripts has expired..

      Letter

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. The time allocated for running scripts has expired. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.The The time allocated for running scripts has expired. letter of the The time allocated for running scripts has expired. alphabet, written in the Latin script.
      See also
      edit

      Noun

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. The time allocated for running scripts has expired. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      edit
      • with diacritics: The time allocated for running scripts has expired., The time allocated for running scripts has expired., The time allocated for running scripts has expired., The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Etymology 2

      edit

      From The time allocated for running scripts has expired., from The time allocated for running scripts has expired. (with the disappearance of an initial l; compare The time allocated for running scripts has expired.).

      Article

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. The time allocated for running scripts has expired. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
        • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
        • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      Quotations
      edit

      For quotations using this term, see [[Citations:o#The time allocated for running scripts has expired.|Citations:o]].

      See also
      edit
      Portuguese articles (edit)
      Singular Plural
      Masculine Feminine Masculine Feminine
      Definite articles
      (the)
      The time allocated for running scripts has expired. The time allocated for running scripts has expired. The time allocated for running scripts has expired. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      Indefinite articles
      (a, an; some)
      The time allocated for running scripts has expired. The time allocated for running scripts has expired. The time allocated for running scripts has expired. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Pronoun

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. The time allocated for running scripts has expired. her, it (as a direct object; as an indirect object, see lhe; after prepositions, see ela)
        The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      Usage notes
      edit
      • Becomes The time allocated for running scripts has expired. after verb forms ending in -r, -s, or -z, the pronouns The time allocated for running scripts has expired. and The time allocated for running scripts has expired., and the adverb The time allocated for running scripts has expired.; the final letter causing the change disappears.
        After The time allocated for running scripts has expired.: Posso vê-la? — “May I see her/it?”
        After The time allocated for running scripts has expired.: Ele pô-la ali. — “He put her/it there.”
        After The time allocated for running scripts has expired.: Fi-la ficar contente. — “I made her/it become happy.”
        After The time allocated for running scripts has expired.: Ela deu-no-la relutantemente. — “She gave her/it to us reluctantly.”
        After The time allocated for running scripts has expired.: Ei-la! — “Behold her/it!”
      • Becomes The time allocated for running scripts has expired. after a nasal vowel or diphthong: -ão, -am [ɐ̃w̃], -õe [õj̃], -em, -êm [ẽj̃].
        Detêm-na como prisioneira. — “They detain her/it as a prisoner.”
      • In informal Brazilian Portuguese, the nominative form The time allocated for running scripts has expired. is more commonly used.
        Eu a vi.Eu vi ela.: “I saw her/it.”
      Quotations
      edit

      For quotations using this term, see [[Citations:a#The time allocated for running scripts has expired.|Citations:a]].

      See also
      edit

      See Template:Portuguese personal pronouns for more.

      Etymology 3

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired. From The time allocated for running scripts has expired., from The time allocated for running scripts has expired. and The time allocated for running scripts has expired..

      Preposition

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. The time allocated for running scripts has expired. to, introduces the indirect object
        The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
        The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
        The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
        • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
        • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      2. The time allocated for running scripts has expired. to; towards, indicates destination
        The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
        The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      3. The time allocated for running scripts has expired. away, indicates a physical distance
        The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
        The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      4. The time allocated for running scripts has expired. with; by means of, using as an instrument or means
        The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
        The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
        The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
        The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      5. The time allocated for running scripts has expired. with; on, using as a medium or fuel
        The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
        The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      6. The time allocated for running scripts has expired. by, using the specified measurement; in the specified quantity
        The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
        The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      7. The time allocated for running scripts has expired. The time allocated for running scripts has expired. by, indicates a steady progression
        The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
        The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      8. The time allocated for running scripts has expired. in the style or manner of; a la
        The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
        The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
        The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      9. The time allocated for running scripts has expired. The time allocated for running scripts has expired. at, during the specified period
        The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
        The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
        The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      10. The time allocated for running scripts has expired. The time allocated for running scripts has expired. at; in, indicates a location or position
        The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
        The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      11. The time allocated for running scripts has expired. indicates the direct object, mainly to avoid confusion when it, the subject, or both are displaced, or for emphasis
        The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      12. The time allocated for running scripts has expired. The time allocated for running scripts has expired. forms the present participle
        The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      13. The time allocated for running scripts has expired. The time allocated for running scripts has expired. to, forms the future participle
        The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
        The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
        The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      Usage notes
      edit

      When followed by a definite article, a is combined with the article to give the following combined forms:

      • a + The time allocated for running scripts has expired.The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      • a + The time allocated for running scripts has expired.The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      • a + The time allocated for running scripts has expired.The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      • a + The time allocated for running scripts has expired.The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      In the sense of to (introducing the indirect object) usage with a personal pronoun can be replaced with an indirect pronoun (The time allocated for running scripts has expired., The time allocated for running scripts has expired., The time allocated for running scripts has expired., The time allocated for running scripts has expired., The time allocated for running scripts has expired., The time allocated for running scripts has expired.):

      • Deram um livro a ele.Deram-lhe um livro.

      In the sense of at (during the specified period) it can be used with:

      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      • specific hours

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired., The time allocated for running scripts has expired., The time allocated for running scripts has expired. use The time allocated for running scripts has expired. instead, which can optionally be used for tarde, noitinha and noite as well. Names of months, days of the month and of the week use The time allocated for running scripts has expired..

      Quotations
      edit

      For quotations using this term, see [[Citations:a#The time allocated for running scripts has expired.|Citations:a]].

      Descendants
      edit
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      See also
      edit
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Etymology 4

      edit

      Alternative forms

      edit
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Interjection

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. The time allocated for running scripts has expired. oh, expression of mild surprise
        The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      Quotations
      edit

      For quotations using this term, see [[Citations:a#The time allocated for running scripts has expired.|Citations:a]].

      Etymology 5

      edit

      From homophone The time allocated for running scripts has expired..

      Verb

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      Quotations
      edit

      For quotations using this term, see [[Citations:a#The time allocated for running scripts has expired.|Citations:a]].

      Etymology 6

      edit

      From homophone The time allocated for running scripts has expired..

      Contraction

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      Quotations
      edit

      For quotations using this term, see [[Citations:a#The time allocated for running scripts has expired.|Citations:a]].

      Rapa Nui

      edit

      Pronunciation

      edit
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Etymology 1

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired. From The time allocated for running scripts has expired.. Cognates include The time allocated for running scripts has expired. and The time allocated for running scripts has expired..

      Article

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Etymology 2

      edit

      From The time allocated for running scripts has expired.. Cognates include The time allocated for running scripts has expired. and The time allocated for running scripts has expired..

      Preposition

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. along, towards

      References

      edit
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Rawang

      edit

      Pronunciation

      edit
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Suffix

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. verbal suffix for marking benefactive of the V.

      Pronoun

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. proximate demonstrative pronoun
        The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
        The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
        The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Romagnol

      edit

      Etymology 1

      edit

      See the etymology of the corresponding lemma form.

      Alternative forms

      edit
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Pronunciation

      edit
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.: The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.:
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.: The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Verb

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Etymology 2

      edit

      From The time allocated for running scripts has expired..

      Pronoun

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. The time allocated for running scripts has expired. I
      2. The time allocated for running scripts has expired. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      3. The time allocated for running scripts has expired. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Etymology 3

      edit

      Inherited from The time allocated for running scripts has expired., The time allocated for running scripts has expired..

      Preposition

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. to; at

      Romani

      edit

      Pronunciation

      edit
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Etymology 1

      edit

      Letter

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.The The time allocated for running scripts has expired. letter of the The time allocated for running scripts has expired. alphabet, written in the Latin script.
      See also
      edit
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired. International Standard: The time allocated for running scripts has expired.. Pan-Vlax: The time allocated for running scripts has expired..

      Etymology 2

      edit

      Interjection

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. oh, ah

      References

      edit
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Romanian

      edit

      Pronunciation

      edit
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Letter

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.The The time allocated for running scripts has expired. letter of the The time allocated for running scripts has expired. alphabet, written in the Latin script.

      See also

      edit

      Etymology 1

      edit

      Article

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Etymology 2

      edit

      From The time allocated for running scripts has expired., from The time allocated for running scripts has expired..

      Preposition

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. The time allocated for running scripts has expired. the infinitive marker: to
        The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      2. The time allocated for running scripts has expired. at (now almost completely replaced by The time allocated for running scripts has expired.)
      3. The time allocated for running scripts has expired. like, of

      Etymology 3

      edit

      From Proto-Romanian, from a late The time allocated for running scripts has expired., from The time allocated for running scripts has expired..[1]

      Verb

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
        (he/she) has...
        The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      Usage notes
      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired. is used instead of The time allocated for running scripts has expired. to form the third-person singular perfect compus.

      References

      edit

      Sardinian

      edit

      Etymology 1

      edit

      From The time allocated for running scripts has expired., alternative form of The time allocated for running scripts has expired..

      Pronunciation

      edit
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Conjunction

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. The time allocated for running scripts has expired. Only used in The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      2. The time allocated for running scripts has expired. Only used in The time allocated for running scripts has expired. and The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      3. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
        1. The time allocated for running scripts has expired. Only used in The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
        2. The time allocated for running scripts has expired. Only used in The time allocated for running scripts has expired. and The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
        3. The time allocated for running scripts has expired. Only used in The time allocated for running scripts has expired. and The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Etymology 2

      edit

      From The time allocated for running scripts has expired. from The time allocated for running scripts has expired., from The time allocated for running scripts has expired..

      Alternative forms

      edit
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Pronunciation

      edit
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Preposition

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.; to
      2. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.; in, to
      3. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.; with
        The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Etymology 3

      edit

      From The time allocated for running scripts has expired., from The time allocated for running scripts has expired., from The time allocated for running scripts has expired., derived from The time allocated for running scripts has expired.. The time allocated for running scripts has expired..

      Pronunciation

      edit
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Conjunction

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. The time allocated for running scripts has expired. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
        The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
        The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      Usage notes
      edit
      • Used in expressions such as The time allocated for running scripts has expired. ... The time allocated for running scripts has expired. ... The time allocated for running scripts has expired. and The time allocated for running scripts has expired. ... The time allocated for running scripts has expired. ... The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
        The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
        • In these expressions, The time allocated for running scripts has expired. can be used instead of The time allocated for running scripts has expired., though it's not common.
      Derived terms
      edit
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      References

      edit
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Sassarese

      edit

      Alternative forms

      edit
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Etymology

      edit

      From The time allocated for running scripts has expired., from The time allocated for running scripts has expired., from The time allocated for running scripts has expired..

      Pronunciation

      edit
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Preposition

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. The time allocated for running scripts has expired. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.; to, The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      2. The time allocated for running scripts has expired. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.; to
      3. The time allocated for running scripts has expired. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.; to
      4. The time allocated for running scripts has expired. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.; to, The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      5. The time allocated for running scripts has expired. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.; at
      6. The time allocated for running scripts has expired. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.; in
      7. The time allocated for running scripts has expired. in, about, with regard to
      8. The time allocated for running scripts has expired. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.; to
      9. The time allocated for running scripts has expired. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      10. The time allocated for running scripts has expired. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      11. The time allocated for running scripts has expired. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      12. The time allocated for running scripts has expired. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Quotations

      edit
      • For quotations using this term, see [[Citations:a#The time allocated for running scripts has expired.|Citations:a]].

      References

      edit
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Satawalese

      edit

      Pronunciation

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Pronoun

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired. (third-person singular)

      1. he
      2. she
      3. it

      References

      edit

      Kevin M. Roddy (2007), "A Sketch Grammar Of Satawalese, The Language Of Satawal Island, Yap State, Micronesia"

      Scots

      edit

      Etymology 1

      edit

      Letter

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.The The time allocated for running scripts has expired. letter of the The time allocated for running scripts has expired. alphabet, written in the Latin script.
      See also
      edit

      Etymology 2

      edit

      From The time allocated for running scripts has expired., from The time allocated for running scripts has expired..

      Pronunciation

      edit
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Article

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. a, an (indefinite article)
      Usage notes
      edit
      • Unlike English, this form can be used before both consonant and vowel sounds. However, this is not often the case in written Scots, probably due to the influence of English. [1]
      Synonyms
      edit
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      References

      edit

      Etymology 3

      edit

      Determiner

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Adverb

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Noun

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      References

      edit

      Scottish Gaelic

      edit

      Pronunciation

      edit
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Etymology 1

      edit

      Letter

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.The The time allocated for running scripts has expired. letter of the The time allocated for running scripts has expired. alphabet, written in the Latin script. It is followed by The time allocated for running scripts has expired.. Its traditional name is The time allocated for running scripts has expired..
      See also
      edit
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Etymology 2

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired. From The time allocated for running scripts has expired., from The time allocated for running scripts has expired.. Cognates include The time allocated for running scripts has expired. and The time allocated for running scripts has expired..

      Particle

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.; O
        The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Etymology 3

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired. From The time allocated for running scripts has expired.. Cognates include The time allocated for running scripts has expired..

      Determiner

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. The time allocated for running scripts has expired. his, its
      2. The time allocated for running scripts has expired. her, its
      See also
      edit

      Etymology 4

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired. From The time allocated for running scripts has expired.. Cognates include The time allocated for running scripts has expired..

      Pronoun

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. who, which, that
        The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Etymology 5

      edit

      From The time allocated for running scripts has expired.. Cognates include The time allocated for running scripts has expired..

      Particle

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
        The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Etymology 6

      edit

      From The time allocated for running scripts has expired.. Cognates include The time allocated for running scripts has expired..

      Particle

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.; to
        The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Etymology 7

      edit

      See the etymology of the corresponding lemma form.

      Preposition

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      2. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Etymology 8

      edit

      See the etymology of the corresponding lemma form.

      Particle

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. The time allocated for running scripts has expired. used before The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      Usage notes
      edit
      • Less frequently, The time allocated for running scripts has expired. may be used before bheil as well.

      Etymology 9

      edit

      Interjection

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. ah!
      Alternative forms
      edit
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      References

      edit
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Serbo-Croatian

      edit

      Pronunciation

      edit
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Etymology 1

      edit

      See Translingual section.

      Letter

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. The 1st letter of the Serbo-Croatian Latin alphabet (gajica), followed by The time allocated for running scripts has expired..

      Etymology 2

      edit

      From The time allocated for running scripts has expired..

      Conjunction

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. but, and (compare The time allocated for running scripts has expired.)
        The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
        The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      2. while (on the contrary), whereas
        The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      3. The time allocated for running scripts has expired. without (usually after negative verbs)
        The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
        The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      4. (The time allocated for running scripts has expired.) and yet
        The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      5. (The time allocated for running scripts has expired.) not to mention, let alone
        The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      6. (The time allocated for running scripts has expired.) even if
        The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      7. (The time allocated for running scripts has expired.) and so, and also, and too
        The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
        The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Etymology 3

      edit

      Attested since the 15th century. Probably of onomatopoeic origin. Compare The time allocated for running scripts has expired., The time allocated for running scripts has expired., The time allocated for running scripts has expired., The time allocated for running scripts has expired. and The time allocated for running scripts has expired.. These could all derive from Proto-Indo-European interjection The time allocated for running scripts has expired., but each form in individual languages could easily be an independent, expressive formation.

      Interjection

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. oh, ah
        The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      References

      edit
      • a” in Hrvatski jezični portal
      • a” in Hrvatski jezični portal
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Sicilian

      edit

      Etymology 1

      edit

      From The time allocated for running scripts has expired..

      Pronunciation

      edit
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Noun

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.The name of the Latin-script letter [[A#The time allocated for running scripts has expired.|A]]/[[a#The time allocated for running scripts has expired.|a]].The time allocated for running scripts has expired.; a

      Etymology 2

      edit

      From the lenition of The time allocated for running scripts has expired., from the apheresis of The time allocated for running scripts has expired., from The time allocated for running scripts has expired., from The time allocated for running scripts has expired..

      Pronunciation

      edit
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Article

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. the The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
        The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      Usage notes
      edit
      • As for other Romance languages, such as Neapolitan or Portuguese, Sicilian definite articles have undergone a consonant lenition that has led to the phonetic fall of the initial l. The use of this illiquid variant has not yet made the use of liquid variants disappear, but today it is still the prevalent use in speech and writing.
      • In the case of the production of literary texts, such as singing or poetry, or of formal and institutional texts, resorting to "liquid articles" and "liquid articulated prepositions" confers greater euphony to the text, although it may sound a form of courtly recovery.
      • Illiquid definite articles can be phonetically absorbed by the following noun. I.e: l'arancina (liquid) and ârancina (illiquid).
      Inflection
      edit
      Sicilian articles
      Masculine singular definite article Feminine singular definite article Masculine and feminine plural definite article
      Definite articles (liquid) The time allocated for running scripts has expired. The time allocated for running scripts has expired. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      Definite articles (illiquid) The time allocated for running scripts has expired. The time allocated for running scripts has expired. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      Definite articles The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      (also: The time allocated for running scripts has expired.,The time allocated for running scripts has expired.)
      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Etymology 3

      edit

      From the lenition of The time allocated for running scripts has expired., from the apheresis of The time allocated for running scripts has expired., from The time allocated for running scripts has expired., from The time allocated for running scripts has expired..

      Alternative forms

      edit
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Pronunciation

      edit
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Pronoun

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. The time allocated for running scripts has expired. her
        The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
        The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      2. The time allocated for running scripts has expired. it, this or that thing
        The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
        The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      Usage notes
      edit
      • This pronoun can blend in contracted forms with other particles, especially other personal pronominal particles.
      Inflection
      edit
      Sicilian pronominal particles
      Masculine singular pronominal particles Feminine singular pronominal particles Masculine and feminine plural pronominal particles
      The time allocated for running scripts has expired. The time allocated for running scripts has expired. The time allocated for running scripts has expired. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      The time allocated for running scripts has expired. The time allocated for running scripts has expired. The time allocated for running scripts has expired. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      The time allocated for running scripts has expired. The time allocated for running scripts has expired. The time allocated for running scripts has expired. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      The time allocated for running scripts has expired. The time allocated for running scripts has expired. The time allocated for running scripts has expired. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      The time allocated for running scripts has expired. The time allocated for running scripts has expired. The time allocated for running scripts has expired. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      The time allocated for running scripts has expired. The time allocated for running scripts has expired. The time allocated for running scripts has expired. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Etymology 4

      edit

      From the merge of The time allocated for running scripts has expired. and The time allocated for running scripts has expired..

      Preposition

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.; to
        The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
        The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
        The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      2. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.; in, to
        The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
        The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      3. The time allocated for running scripts has expired. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.; with
        The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      4. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
        The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
        The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
        The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      Usage notes
      edit
      • When followed by a word that begins with a vowel sound, the form The time allocated for running scripts has expired. (also rhotacized as The time allocated for running scripts has expired.) is used instead.
      • When followed by the definite article, The time allocated for running scripts has expired. combines with the article to produce the following combined forms:
      The time allocated for running scripts has expired. + article Combined form
      The time allocated for running scripts has expired. + The time allocated for running scripts has expired. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      The time allocated for running scripts has expired. + The time allocated for running scripts has expired. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      The time allocated for running scripts has expired. + The time allocated for running scripts has expired. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      The time allocated for running scripts has expired. + The time allocated for running scripts has expired. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      The time allocated for running scripts has expired. + The time allocated for running scripts has expired. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      The time allocated for running scripts has expired. + The time allocated for running scripts has expired. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Etymology 5

      edit

      Verb

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Silesian

      edit

      Pronunciation

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Etymology 1

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired. The Silesian orthography is based on the Latin alphabet. No earlier script is known. See the Silesian language article on Wikipedia for more, and The time allocated for running scripts has expired. for development of the glyph itself.

      Letter

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.The The time allocated for running scripts has expired. letter of the The time allocated for running scripts has expired. alphabet, written in the Latin script.

      See also

      edit

      Etymology 2

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.The time allocated for running scripts has expired. Inherited from The time allocated for running scripts has expired..

      Conjunction

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. and (The time allocated for running scripts has expired.)
      2. and, but, whereas (The time allocated for running scripts has expired.)
      3. and then (The time allocated for running scripts has expired.)
      4. and (The time allocated for running scripts has expired.)

      Particle

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Etymology 3

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired. Inherited from The time allocated for running scripts has expired., from The time allocated for running scripts has expired..

      Interjection

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.; ah!

      Further reading

      edit
      • a in dykcjonorz.eu
      • a in silling.org

      Skolt Sami

      edit

      Pronunciation

      edit
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Etymology 1

      edit

      See Translingual section.

      Letter

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.The The time allocated for running scripts has expired. letter of the The time allocated for running scripts has expired. alphabet, written in the Latin script.
      See also
      edit

      Etymology 2

      edit

      Borrowed from The time allocated for running scripts has expired. 'but'.[1]

      Conjunction

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. but
      2. how, what about

      References

      edit
      1. ^ Juutinen, Markus. 2022. “Russian Loanwords in Skolt Saami”. Finnisch-Ugrische Forschungen 2022 (67):75–126. https://doi.org/10.33339/fuf.110737.

      Further reading

      edit
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Slovak

      edit

      Etymology 1

      edit

      From The time allocated for running scripts has expired., form of The time allocated for running scripts has expired., from The time allocated for running scripts has expired. The time allocated for running scripts has expired., from The time allocated for running scripts has expired. The time allocated for running scripts has expired., from The time allocated for running scripts has expired. The time allocated for running scripts has expired., from The time allocated for running scripts has expired. The time allocated for running scripts has expired..

      Letter

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.The The time allocated for running scripts has expired. letter of the The time allocated for running scripts has expired. alphabet, written in the Latin script.
      See also
      edit
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Etymology 2

      edit

      From The time allocated for running scripts has expired..

      Conjunction

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. and
      Derived terms
      edit
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Further reading

      edit
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Slovene

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Etymology 1

      edit

      From Gaj's Latin alphabet The time allocated for running scripts has expired., from The time allocated for running scripts has expired. alphabet The time allocated for running scripts has expired., modification of capital The time allocated for running scripts has expired., itself derived from the The time allocated for running scripts has expired. letter The time allocated for running scripts has expired., from the The time allocated for running scripts has expired. letter The time allocated for running scripts has expired., derived from the The time allocated for running scripts has expired. letter The time allocated for running scripts has expired., from the The time allocated for running scripts has expired. hieroglyph The time allocated for running scripts has expired..

      Pronunciation

      edit
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.: The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.: The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.: The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Letter

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.The The time allocated for running scripts has expired. letter of the The time allocated for running scripts has expired. alphabet, written in the Latin script.
      2. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.The The time allocated for running scripts has expired. letter of the The time allocated for running scripts has expired. alphabet (Resian), written in the Latin script.
      3. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.The The time allocated for running scripts has expired. letter of the The time allocated for running scripts has expired. alphabet (Natisone Valley dialect), written in the Latin script.

      Symbol

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. The time allocated for running scripts has expired. Phonetic transcription of sound [a].

      Noun

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      2. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      Inflection
      edit
      • Overall more common

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      • More common when with a definite adjective
      Masculine inan., no endings
      nom. sing. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      gen. sing. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      singular dual plural
      nominative The time allocated for running scripts has expired. The time allocated for running scripts has expired. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      accusative The time allocated for running scripts has expired. The time allocated for running scripts has expired. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      genitive The time allocated for running scripts has expired. The time allocated for running scripts has expired. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      dative The time allocated for running scripts has expired. The time allocated for running scripts has expired. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      locative The time allocated for running scripts has expired. The time allocated for running scripts has expired. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      instrumental The time allocated for running scripts has expired. The time allocated for running scripts has expired. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Derived terms

      edit
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired., The time allocated for running scripts has expired., The time allocated for running scripts has expired., The time allocated for running scripts has expired., The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired., The time allocated for running scripts has expired., The time allocated for running scripts has expired., The time allocated for running scripts has expired., The time allocated for running scripts has expired., The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Etymology 2

      edit

      Attested since the 18th century. Probably of onomatopoeic origin. Compare The time allocated for running scripts has expired., The time allocated for running scripts has expired., The time allocated for running scripts has expired., The time allocated for running scripts has expired. and The time allocated for running scripts has expired.. These could all derive from Proto-Indo-European interjection The time allocated for running scripts has expired., but each form in individual languages could easily be an independent, expressive formation.

      Pronunciation

      edit
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Interjection

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. oh
      2. Used at the end of a sentence for confirmation, similarly to 'didn't I' in English.
        The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      Synonyms
      edit
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Etymology 3

      edit

      From The time allocated for running scripts has expired., from The time allocated for running scripts has expired., which is ablative form of The time allocated for running scripts has expired. 'this'. Cognates with The time allocated for running scripts has expired., The time allocated for running scripts has expired. and The time allocated for running scripts has expired..

      Pronunciation

      edit
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Conjunction

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. but
        The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Particle

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. The time allocated for running scripts has expired., particle used to form a yes- no question.
        The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      See also

      edit
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Further reading

      edit
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Slovincian

      edit

      Pronunciation

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Etymology 1

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.The time allocated for running scripts has expired. Inherited from The time allocated for running scripts has expired..

      Conjunction

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. and
        The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      2. and, but, whereas
      Derived terms
      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Etymology 2

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.The time allocated for running scripts has expired. Inherited from The time allocated for running scripts has expired..

      Interjection

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. ah!
        The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      References

      edit
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Spanish

      edit

      Pronunciation

      edit
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Etymology 1

      edit

      Letter

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.The The time allocated for running scripts has expired. letter of the The time allocated for running scripts has expired. alphabet, written in the Latin script.

      Noun

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      See also
      edit

      Etymology 2

      edit

      From The time allocated for running scripts has expired..

      Alternative forms

      edit
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Preposition

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. to
        • 1605, Miguel de Cervantes Saavedra, Don Quijote de la Mancha1, Chapter I:
          Tenía en su casa una ama que pasaba de los cuarenta y una sobrina que no llegaba a los veinte, y un mozo de campo y plaza que así ensillaba el rocín como tomaba la podadera.
          He had in his house a housekeeper past forty, a niece under twenty, and a lad for the field and market-place, who used to saddle the hack as well as handle the billhook.
      2. by
      3. at
      4. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
        The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      Usage notes
      edit
      • Personal The time allocated for running scripts has expired. is not translated into English.
      Derived terms
      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      See also
      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Sranan Tongo

      edit

      Pronoun

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. he, she, it
        • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Article

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. the

      Usage notes

      edit

      Sranan Tongo makes no difference between singular and plural forms, except for pronouns and determiners and the definite article. Common nouns referring to a collection of similar items are usually treated as singular where in English they would be grammatically plural, and so are referred to with singular pronouns and determiners and the singular definite article.

      Preposition

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. at, to
        The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Particle

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. The time allocated for running scripts has expired. to be (used with a noun phrase as complement)
        The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Usage notes

      edit

      This particle is only used when the temporal aspect is unmarked, whether for timeless facts, or for statements where time is not considered relevant.

      Sumerian

      edit

      Romanization

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Swahili

      edit

      Particle

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.; The time allocated for running scripts has expired.; of
        The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
        The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
        • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Usage notes

      edit
      • This particle agrees in class with the noun preceding it.
      • When used as an adjectival particle, the particle itself is untranslated:
        • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
        • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      • When used as a genitive particle, the particle is sometimes untranslated:
        • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Inflection

      edit

      See also

      edit

      Swedish

      edit

      Preposition

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. from The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Usage notes

      edit

      See also

      edit
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Letter

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.The The time allocated for running scripts has expired. letter of the The time allocated for running scripts has expired. alphabet, written in the Latin script.

      See also

      edit

      Adverb

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired. (not comparable)

      1. The time allocated for running scripts has expired. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Tagalog

      edit

      Etymology 1

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.. Each pronunciation has a different source:

      • Filipino alphabet pronunciation is influenced by The time allocated for running scripts has expired..
      • Abakada alphabet pronunciation is influenced by Baybayin character The time allocated for running scripts has expired..
      • Abecedario pronunciation is from The time allocated for running scripts has expired..

      Pronunciation

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Letter

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.The The time allocated for running scripts has expired. letter of the The time allocated for running scripts has expired. alphabet (the Filipino alphabet), called The time allocated for running scripts has expired. and written in the Latin script.

      Letter

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.The The time allocated for running scripts has expired. letter of the The time allocated for running scripts has expired. alphabet (the Abakada alphabet), called The time allocated for running scripts has expired. and written in the Latin script.
      2. The time allocated for running scripts has expired. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.The The time allocated for running scripts has expired. letter of the The time allocated for running scripts has expired. alphabet (the Abecedario), called The time allocated for running scripts has expired. and written in the Latin script.
      See also
      edit

      Noun

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.the name of the Latin-script letter [[A#The time allocated for running scripts has expired.|A]]/[[a#The time allocated for running scripts has expired.|a]], in the Abakada alphabetThe time allocated for running scripts has expired.
        The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      2. The time allocated for running scripts has expired. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.the name of the Latin-script letter [[A#The time allocated for running scripts has expired.|A]]/[[a#The time allocated for running scripts has expired.|a]], in the AbecedarioThe time allocated for running scripts has expired.
        The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      See also
      edit
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Etymology 2

      edit

      Pronunciation

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Interjection

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. ah: an exclamation of pity, admiration or surprise
        The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      2. oh (The time allocated for running scripts has expired.)
        The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Alternative forms

      edit
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Etymology 3

      edit

      Pronunciation

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Interjection

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. The time allocated for running scripts has expired. ouch (The time allocated for running scripts has expired.)
        The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      Alternative forms
      edit
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Etymology 4

      edit

      Pronunciation

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Particle

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. The time allocated for running scripts has expired. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      Alternative forms
      edit
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Further reading

      edit
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Tarantino

      edit

      Preposition

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. in
      2. at
      3. to

      Tày

      edit

      Pronunciation

      edit
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Etymology 1

      edit

      Particle

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. alright?; okay?; will you?
        The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
        The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      2. already
        The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      Derived terms
      edit
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Etymology 2

      edit

      From The time allocated for running scripts has expired.. Cognate with The time allocated for running scripts has expired., The time allocated for running scripts has expired..

      Noun

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. paternal aunt
        The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
        The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      2. younger sister
        The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      Derived terms
      edit
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      References

      edit
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Tok Pisin

      edit

      Etymology

      edit

      Imitative or onomatopoeia.

      Interjection

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. eh?
        • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Tokelauan

      edit

      Pronunciation

      edit
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Etymology 1

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired. From The time allocated for running scripts has expired.. Cognates include The time allocated for running scripts has expired. and The time allocated for running scripts has expired..

      Article

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      Derived terms
      edit
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      See also
      edit

      Etymology 2

      edit

      From The time allocated for running scripts has expired.. Cognates include The time allocated for running scripts has expired. and The time allocated for running scripts has expired..

      Preposition

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.; of
      See also
      edit
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      References

      edit
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Tooro

      edit

      Pronunciation

      edit
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Particle

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.; The time allocated for running scripts has expired.; of

      Declension

      edit

      References

      edit
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Turkish

      edit

      Pronunciation

      edit
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Letter

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.The The time allocated for running scripts has expired. letter of the The time allocated for running scripts has expired. alphabet, written in the Latin script.

      See also

      edit

      Noun

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      See also

      edit

      Turkmen

      edit

      Pronunciation

      edit
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Letter

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.The The time allocated for running scripts has expired. letter of the The time allocated for running scripts has expired. alphabet, written in the Latin script.

      See also

      edit

      Tyap

      edit

      Pronunciation

      edit
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Letter

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.The The time allocated for running scripts has expired. letter of the The time allocated for running scripts has expired. alphabet, written in the Latin script.

      Interjection

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. ah (expression of surprise, question)
      2. eh (expression of reluctance)

      Pronoun

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. you (2nd person subject singular personal pronoun)

      Pronoun

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. he/she (3rd person singular personal pronoun)

      Pronunciation

      edit
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Pronoun

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. they (indefinite) (3rd person plural personal pronoun)

      Pronunciation

      edit
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      See also

      edit
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.


      Upper Sorbian

      edit

      Conjunction

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. and
      2. the (establishing a parallel between two comparatives)
        The time allocated for running scripts has expired.The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
        The time allocated for running scripts has expired.The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Further reading

      edit
      • a” in Soblex

      Vietnamese

      edit

      Pronunciation

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Etymology 1

      edit

      Borrowed from The time allocated for running scripts has expired..

      Letter

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.The The time allocated for running scripts has expired. letter of the The time allocated for running scripts has expired. alphabet, called The time allocated for running scripts has expired. and written in the Latin script.

      Noun

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.The name of the Latin-script letter [[A#The time allocated for running scripts has expired.|A]]/[[a#The time allocated for running scripts has expired.|a]].The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      See also

      edit
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Etymology 2

      edit

      Noun

      edit

      (classifier The time allocated for running scripts has expired.) The time allocated for running scripts has expired.The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. a cutting tool consisting of two blades inserted into a long handle to cut grass or to harvest rice
        The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
        The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Etymology 3

      edit

      Verb

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. to rush or charge forward at
        The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
        The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Etymology 4

      edit

      Pronoun

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. The time allocated for running scripts has expired. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Etymology 5

      edit

      Particle

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. The time allocated for running scripts has expired. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
        The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
        The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Etymology 6

      edit

      Interjection

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
        The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
        The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Volapük

      edit

      Etymology

      edit

      Borrowed from The time allocated for running scripts has expired. or The time allocated for running scripts has expired..

      Pronunciation

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Preposition

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. per, The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
        The time allocated for running scripts has expired.The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      2. by
        The time allocated for running scripts has expired.The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Votic

      edit

      Pronunciation

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Etymology 1

      edit

      Letter

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.The The time allocated for running scripts has expired. letter of the The time allocated for running scripts has expired. alphabet, written in the Latin script.

      Etymology 2

      edit

      Borrowed from The time allocated for running scripts has expired..

      Conjunction

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. but (Following a negative clause or sentence) On the contrary, but rather
      2. However, although, nevertheless, on the other hand

      Etymology 3

      edit

      Natural. Compare The time allocated for running scripts has expired..

      Interjection

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. ah!, oh!
      2. oops!
      3. ouch!

      See also

      edit

      References

      edit
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Walloon

      edit

      Etymology

      edit

      From The time allocated for running scripts has expired..

      Pronunciation

      edit
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Preposition

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. at

      Welsh

      edit

      Etymology 1

      edit

      Alternative forms

      edit
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Pronunciation

      edit
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Letter

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.The The time allocated for running scripts has expired. letter of the The time allocated for running scripts has expired. alphabet, called The time allocated for running scripts has expired. and written in the Latin script. It is followed by The time allocated for running scripts has expired..
      Mutation
      edit
      • a cannot be mutated but, being a vowel, does take The time allocated for running scripts has expired., for example with the word The time allocated for running scripts has expired.:

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Derived terms
      edit
      • Digraph sequences: The time allocated for running scripts has expired., The time allocated for running scripts has expired., The time allocated for running scripts has expired., The time allocated for running scripts has expired., The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      See also
      edit

      Noun

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.The name of the Latin-script letter [[A#The time allocated for running scripts has expired.|A]]/[[a#The time allocated for running scripts has expired.|a]].The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      Mutation
      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Etymology 2

      edit

      Pronunciation

      edit
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Verb

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. The time allocated for running scripts has expired. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      Synonyms
      edit
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Etymology 3

      edit

      From The time allocated for running scripts has expired., from The time allocated for running scripts has expired., from The time allocated for running scripts has expired. (compare The time allocated for running scripts has expired. and The time allocated for running scripts has expired.).

      Pronunciation

      edit
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Conjunction

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. and
      Synonyms
      edit
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Etymology 4

      edit

      Pronunciation

      edit
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Pronoun

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. The time allocated for running scripts has expired. that, which, who (used in 'direct' relative clauses, i.e. where the pronoun refers to the subject or the direct object of an inflected verb (as opposed to a periphrastic construction with bod, to be)).
        The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      Usage notes
      edit
      1. a is not used with the third person singular present of the verb bod, where the relative verb form sydd is used instead
        The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
        The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
        not *Y dyn a yw'n ifanc
      2. a is not used in indirect relative clauses, where the pronoun is part of a genitive or periphrastic construction. Instead the second relative pronoun y is used
        The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
        The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
        not *Y dyn a oedd ei chwaer yma

      West Makian

      edit

      Etymology 1

      edit

      Pronunciation

      edit
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Verb

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. The time allocated for running scripts has expired. to be cooked
      2. The time allocated for running scripts has expired. to be done, finished
      Conjugation
      edit
      Conjugation of a (stative verb)
      singular plural
      inclusive exclusive
      1st person The time allocated for running scripts has expired. The time allocated for running scripts has expired. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      2nd person The time allocated for running scripts has expired. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      3rd person inanimate The time allocated for running scripts has expired. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      animate The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      imperative —, The time allocated for running scripts has expired. —, The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Etymology 2

      edit

      Pronunciation

      edit
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Verb

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. The time allocated for running scripts has expired. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      Usage notes
      edit

      The verb a ("to eat") takes the same verbal prefixes that directional verbs do.

      Conjugation
      edit
      Conjugation of a (directional verb)
      singular plural
      inclusive exclusive
      1st person The time allocated for running scripts has expired. The time allocated for running scripts has expired. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      2nd person The time allocated for running scripts has expired. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      3rd person inanimate The time allocated for running scripts has expired. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      animate
      imperative The time allocated for running scripts has expired., The time allocated for running scripts has expired. The time allocated for running scripts has expired., The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      References

      edit
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Yele

      edit

      Pronunciation

      edit
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Letter

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Derived terms

      edit
      • The digraph aa transcribes the long vowel /æː/
      • The digraph ꞉a transcribes the nasal vowel /æ̃/
      • The trigraph ꞉aa transcribes the long nasal vowel /æ̃ː/

      See also

      edit
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Yola

      edit

      Etymology 1

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired. From The time allocated for running scripts has expired., from The time allocated for running scripts has expired..

      Alternative forms

      edit
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired., The time allocated for running scripts has expired., The time allocated for running scripts has expired., The time allocated for running scripts has expired., The time allocated for running scripts has expired., The time allocated for running scripts has expired., The time allocated for running scripts has expired., The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Pronunciation

      edit
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Article

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. the, in later times the.
        • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
        • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
        • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Etymology 2

      edit

      From The time allocated for running scripts has expired., The time allocated for running scripts has expired., from The time allocated for running scripts has expired..

      Alternative forms

      edit
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Pronunciation

      edit
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Article

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. one
        • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Etymology 3

      edit

      Unstressed form of The time allocated for running scripts has expired..

      Pronunciation

      edit
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Preposition

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. on
        • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
        • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Etymology 4

      edit

      Pronoun

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
        • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Etymology 5

      edit

      Preposition

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
        • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      References

      edit

      Yoruba

      edit

      Etymology 1

      edit

      Pronunciation

      edit
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Letter

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.The The time allocated for running scripts has expired. letter of the The time allocated for running scripts has expired. alphabet, called The time allocated for running scripts has expired. and written in the Latin script.

      Noun

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.The name of the Latin-script letter [[A#The time allocated for running scripts has expired.|A]]/[[a#The time allocated for running scripts has expired.|a]].The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      See also

      edit
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Etymology 2

      edit

      Likely a The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Pronunciation

      edit
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Pronoun

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. we (The time allocated for running scripts has expired.)
        The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
        The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      Usage notes
      edit

      Similar to other shortened subject pronouns, its usage is restricted and can only be found directly before a verb or pre-verbal marker. It cannot be used with particles/discourse markers such as The time allocated for running scripts has expired. or conjunctions such as The time allocated for running scripts has expired., The time allocated for running scripts has expired., and The time allocated for running scripts has expired.. In those cases, The time allocated for running scripts has expired. must be used instead.

      Etymology 3

      edit

      Pronunciation

      edit
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Pronoun

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. him, her, it (The time allocated for running scripts has expired.)
        The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
        The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Pronoun

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. him, her, it (The time allocated for running scripts has expired.)
        The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
        The time allocated for running scripts has expired.
        The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      See also

      edit

      See Template:yo-personal pronouns.

      Yucatec Maya

      edit

      Pronoun

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. you (The time allocated for running scripts has expired.)

      Zazaki

      edit

      Letter

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.The The time allocated for running scripts has expired. letter of the The time allocated for running scripts has expired. alphabet, written in the Latin script.

      See also

      edit

      Pronoun

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. she

      Zhuang

      edit

      Pronunciation

      edit
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Etymology 1

      edit

      Compare The time allocated for running scripts has expired..

      Noun

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. crow
      Synonyms
      edit
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Etymology 2

      edit

      Noun

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. The time allocated for running scripts has expired. mother

      Etymology 3

      edit

      Particle

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Pronunciation

      edit
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Noun

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. hen

      References

      edit
      • The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      Zulu

      edit

      Letter

      edit

      The time allocated for running scripts has expired.

      1. The time allocated for running scripts has expired.The The time allocated for running scripts has expired. letter of the The time allocated for running scripts has expired. alphabet, written in the Latin script.

      See also

      edit