heto
See also: -hető
Esperanto edit
Etymology edit
From Ancient Greek ἧτα (hêta, “the letter Ͱ”).
Pronunciation edit
Noun edit
heto (accusative singular heton, plural hetoj, accusative plural hetojn)
Lindu edit
Noun edit
heto
Tagalog edit
Alternative forms edit
Etymology edit
From Proto-Central Philippine *ha-itu, from *ha- "existential prefix" + *itu "here". See also hi- (stative prefix), ito (“this”) and other Tagalog demonstrative pronouns.
Pronunciation edit
Interjection edit
heto (Baybayin spelling ᜑᜒᜆᜓ)
See also edit
Tagalog demonstrative pronouns
Direct (ang) | Indirect (ng) | Oblique (sa) | Locative (nasa) | Existential | Manner (gaya ng) | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Near speaker* | ari/are, iri/ire/idi, yari** | nari/nare, niri/nire/nidi, niyari† | dini/dine | nandini, narini, nairi/naidi, naari | ere/eri, here/heri, ayri | ganari, ganiri, garini(garni), gayari† |
Near speaker and listener* | ito | nito | dito | nandito, narito, naito** | heto, eto, ayto† | ganito, garito(garto)** |
Near listener | iyan, yaan | niyan | diyan/diyaan | nandiyan/nandiyaan, nariyan(naryan), nayan/nayaan**, naiyan‡ | hayan, ayan | ganiyan(ganyan), gay-an**, gariyan** |
Remote | iyon, yoon, yaon† | niyon, noon, niyaon† | doon | nandoon, naron/naroon**, nayon/nayoon**, nayaon‡ | hayon/hayun, ayon/ayun | ganoon, gayon, gay-on, gayoon‡,garoon‡ |
*These two series have merged in modern Tagalog. The first row is used in some dialects, the second row is used anywhere else. **These pronouns are used in some dialects. †These pronouns are not commonly used in casual speech but more prevalent in literature. ‡Rare in text. |