te
From Wiktionary, the free dictionary
See also: Appendix:Variations of "te"
Languages (89)
Translingual • English
Afrikaans • Äiwoo • Akan • Albanian • Aragonese • Asturian • Basque • Blagar • Breton • Catalan • Classical Nahuatl • Coatepec Nahuatl • Cornish • Czech • Dalmatian • Danish • Deg Xinag • Dutch • Estonian • Ewe • Fala • Faroese • Finnish • Franco-Provençal • French • Galician • Haitian Creole • Hawaiian • Hungarian • Hunsrik • Icelandic • Ido • Indonesian • Irish • Italian • Japanese • Kalasha • Kholosi • Kikuyu • Ladin • Latin • Latvian • Lithuanian • Lower Sorbian • Maltese • Manchu • Mandarin • Maori • Meriam • Middle Dutch • Middle English • Middle French • Mohawk • Neapolitan • Norwegian Bokmål • Norwegian Nynorsk • Occitan • Old English • Old French • Pali • Papiamentu • Phuthi • Polish • Portuguese • Rapa Nui • Romani • Romanian • Romansch • Serbo-Croatian • Sicilian • Spanish • Sranan Tongo • Sumerian • Swedish • Tagalog • Tahitian • Tokelauan • Tongan • Turkish • Turkmen • Tuvaluan • Veps • Volapük • Welsh • West Makian • White Hmong • Zia
Page categories
Afrikaans • Äiwoo • Akan • Albanian • Aragonese • Asturian • Basque • Blagar • Breton • Catalan • Classical Nahuatl • Coatepec Nahuatl • Cornish • Czech • Dalmatian • Danish • Deg Xinag • Dutch • Estonian • Ewe • Fala • Faroese • Finnish • Franco-Provençal • French • Galician • Haitian Creole • Hawaiian • Hungarian • Hunsrik • Icelandic • Ido • Indonesian • Irish • Italian • Japanese • Kalasha • Kholosi • Kikuyu • Ladin • Latin • Latvian • Lithuanian • Lower Sorbian • Maltese • Manchu • Mandarin • Maori • Meriam • Middle Dutch • Middle English • Middle French • Mohawk • Neapolitan • Norwegian Bokmål • Norwegian Nynorsk • Occitan • Old English • Old French • Pali • Papiamentu • Phuthi • Polish • Portuguese • Rapa Nui • Romani • Romanian • Romansch • Serbo-Croatian • Sicilian • Spanish • Sranan Tongo • Sumerian • Swedish • Tagalog • Tahitian • Tokelauan • Tongan • Turkish • Turkmen • Tuvaluan • Veps • Volapük • Welsh • West Makian • White Hmong • Zia
Page categories
Translingual
Symbol
te
English
Etymology 1
Sense 1: Altered from si in the 19th century to prevent having two notes of the musical scale starting with the same letter, to become te and later ti.
Sense 2: The vowel of ti then changed to 'e' to signify a flattened note.
Pronunciation
Noun
te (plural tes)
Etymology 2
Noun
te (plural tes)
- The name of the Cyrillic script letter Т / т.
Anagrams
Afrikaans
Etymology
Pronunciation
Adverb
te
- indicating excess: too
Preposition
te
Äiwoo
Verb
te
- to see
References
- Ross, M., & Næss, Å. (2007) “An Oceanic origin for Äiwoo, the language of the Reef Islands?”, in Oceanic Linguistics, volume 46, number 2. Cited in: "Äiwoo" in Greenhill, S.J., Blust, R., & Gray, R.D. (2008). The Austronesian Basic Vocabulary Database: From Bioinformatics to Lexomics. Evolutionary Bioinformatics, 4:271–283.
Akan
Albanian
Aragonese
Asturian
Basque
Blagar
Breton
Catalan
Classical Nahuatl
Coatepec Nahuatl
Cornish
Czech
Dalmatian
Danish
Deg Xinag
Dutch
Estonian
Ewe
Fala
Faroese
Finnish
Franco-Provençal
French
Galician
Haitian Creole
Hawaiian
Hungarian
Hunsrik
Icelandic
Ido
Indonesian
Irish
Italian
Japanese
Kalasha
Kholosi
Kikuyu
Ladin
Latin
Latvian
Lithuanian
Lower Sorbian
Maltese
Manchu
Mandarin
Maori
Meriam
Middle Dutch
Middle English
Middle French
Mohawk
Neapolitan
Norwegian Bokmål
Norwegian Nynorsk
Occitan
Old English
Old French
Pali
Papiamentu
Phuthi
Polish
Portuguese
Rapa Nui
Romani
Romanian
Romansch
Serbo-Croatian
Sicilian
Spanish
Sranan Tongo
Sumerian
Swedish
Tagalog
Tahitian
Tokelauan
Tongan
Turkish
Turkmen
Tuvaluan
Veps
Volapük
Welsh
West Makian
White Hmong
Zia
Wikiwand - on
Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.