See also: Celle

Danish Edit

Etymology Edit

From Latin cella.

Pronunciation Edit

Noun Edit

celle c (singular definite cellen, plural indefinite celler)

  1. cell

Inflection Edit

French Edit

Pronunciation Edit

Pronoun Edit

celle f

  1. feminine singular of celui
    J’avais oublié ma gomme, alors j’ai emprunté celle de Pierre.
    I'd forgotten my eraser, so I borrowed Pierre's.

Derived terms Edit

Italian Edit

Pronunciation Edit

  • IPA(key): /ˈt͡ʃɛl.le/
  • Rhymes: -ɛlle
  • Hyphenation: cèl‧le

Noun Edit

celle f

  1. plural of cella

Latvian Edit

Noun Edit

celle f (5th declension)

  1. cell (room in a monastery for sleeping one person)

Declension Edit

Middle English Edit

Alternative forms Edit

Etymology Edit

From Old English cell and Old French cele, selle, both from Latin cella, from Proto-Italic *kelnā; compare halle.

Pronunciation Edit

Noun Edit

celle (plural celles or cellen)

  1. cell (dependent monastery)
  2. cell (residence of a monk or hermit).
  3. A private place room or building for habitation.
  4. A chamber or section, especially one of the brain's parts.
  5. (figurative) A place of entrapment or confinement.
  6. (rare) A storage facility.

Descendants Edit

  • English: cell
  • Scots: cell

References Edit

Norwegian Bokmål Edit

 
Norwegian Wikipedia has an article on:
Wikipedia no

Alternative forms Edit

Etymology Edit

From Latin cella.

Noun Edit

celle f or m (definite singular cella or cellen, indefinite plural celler, definite plural cellene)

  1. a cell (most, if not all, senses)

Derived terms Edit

References Edit

Norwegian Nynorsk Edit

 
Norwegian Nynorsk Wikipedia has an article on:
Wikipedia nn

Alternative forms Edit

Etymology Edit

From Latin cella.

Noun Edit

celle f (definite singular cella, indefinite plural celler, definite plural cellene)

  1. a cell (most, if not all, senses)

Derived terms Edit

References Edit