See also: nôșa, носа, and ноша

Catalan edit

Etymology edit

Inherited from Latin nausia.

Pronunciation edit

Noun edit

nosa f (plural noses)

  1. nuisance, encumbrance

Fala edit

Alternative forms edit

  • nossa (Frades Gaspar's form)

Etymology edit

From Old Galician-Portuguese nossa, from Latin nostram.

Pronunciation edit

Determiner edit

nosa f sg

  1. feminine singular of nosu (our)
    • 2000, Domingo Frades Gaspar, Vamus a falal: Notas pâ coñocel y platical en nosa fala, Editora regional da Extremadura, Theme II, Chapter 2: Recunquista:
      Non poemos analizar con pormenoris estis siglos, pero tampoco se debi toleral que, sin fundamentus, se poña en duda algo que a Historia documentá nos lega sobre nossa terra.
      We can’t thoroughly analyse these centuries, but one mustn’t tolerate that, unfoundedly, something documented history tells us about our land be questioned.

Pronoun edit

nosa f sg

  1. feminine singular of nosu (ours)

See also edit

References edit

  • Valeš, Miroslav (2021) Diccionariu de A Fala: lagarteiru, mañegu, valverdeñu (web)[1], 2nd edition, Minde, Portugal: CIDLeS, published 2022, →ISBN

Galician edit

Etymology edit

From Old Galician-Portuguese nossa, from Vulgar Latin *nossa, from Latin nostra(m), feminine of noster (ours).

Pronunciation edit

Pronoun edit

nosa f (masculine singular noso, masculine plural nosos, feminine singular nosa, feminine plural nosas)

  1. (possessive) ours

See also edit

Further reading edit

Lower Sorbian edit

Pronunciation edit

Noun edit

nosa

  1. genitive singular of nos
  2. nominative dual of nos
  3. accusative dual of nos

Norwegian Bokmål edit

Alternative forms edit

Noun edit

nosa m or f

  1. definite feminine singular of nos

Norwegian Nynorsk edit

Noun edit

nosa f

  1. definite singular of nos

Polish edit

Pronunciation edit

  • IPA(key): /ˈnɔ.sa/
  • Audio:(file)
  • Rhymes: -ɔsa
  • Syllabification: no‧sa

Noun edit

nosa m inan

  1. genitive singular of nos

Swedish edit

Etymology edit

nos +‎ -a

Verb edit

nosa (present nosar, preterite nosade, supine nosat, imperative nosa)

  1. to sniff (especially of an animal)
    Hunden nosade på honom
    The dog sniffed him
  2. (figuratively) to snoop (look at (or investigate) things (which may be out of one's business))
    nosa i andras affärer
    go snooping in other people's business
  3. to briefly try to do something to see if one likes it

Conjugation edit

Related terms edit

References edit

Anagrams edit