Beginning at Tue Oct 15 15:46:45 2024
{{quote-book|en|year=1907|author=Ronald M. Burrows|title=The Discoveries In Crete|page=60|text=The extraordinary thinness of the '''walls''' of these vases, which reminds us of the finest china, or even of Venetian glass}}
{{bor|en|es|Venezuela}}
, from {{der|en|it|Veneziola}}
, diminutive of {{m|it|Venezia|t=]}}
, after the stilt houses reminiscent of Venetian architecture.{{ux|en|The Venetian '''quadrilateral''' comprised Mantua, Peschiera, Verona, and Legnano.}}
{{quote-book|en|author=Katherine A. McIver|title=Kitchens, Cooking, and Eating in Medieval Italy|publisher=w:Rowman & Littlefield|year=2017|page=8|isbn=9781442248946|passage=The Venetian writer’s '''torta''' (see Appendix II) will serve twenty-five people, and he specifies the quantities of ingredients and how to bake the '''torta''' (over a low flame).}}
{{quote-book|en|author=w:Giacomo Leoni|chapter=Of the Corinthian Order|translator=Nicholas Du Bois|title=The Architecture of Palladio]];{{nb...|in Four Books. Containing, a Short Treatise of the Five Orders, and the Most Necessary Observations Concerning All Sorts of Building, as also the Different Construction of Private and Publick Houses, High-ways, Bridges, Market-places, Xystes, and Temples, with Their Plans, Sections, and Upright. To which are Added Several Notes and Observations Made by Inigo Jones, Never Printed before. Revis’d, Design’d, and Publish’d by Giacomo Leoni, a Venetian; Architect to His Most Serene Highness, the Elector Palatine. Translated from the Italian Original.}}|location=London|publisher={{...|Printed by}} John Watts, for the author|year=1715|page=30|pageurl=https://archive.org/details/bim_eighteenth-century_the-architecture-of-a-p_palladio-andrea_1715_1/page/n67/mode/1up|oclc=1326263064|passage=In the deſign of a ''Colonnade'', or ſingle Columns, the ''Inter-columns'' are tvvo diameters, as in the ''Portico'' of St. ''Maria Rotunda'' at ''Rome''; and this manner of '''''diſtancing''''' the Columns is, by ''{{w|Vitruvius}}'', call'd ''Syſtylos''.}}
{{cog|la|generatio}}
as the root; Körting says "the disappearance of two initial syllables hardly seems credible", but Meyer-Lübke notes the Venetian form narazza and the Old Bellunesian form naraccia, positing that after the first syllable ge- was lost, the remaining (una) narazza came to be reanalysed as una razza.[1]{{col-auto|en|{{l|en|ground swell}}, {{l|en|groundswell}}|upswell|knee swell|one swell foop|shrink-swell|swell box|swell mob|swell organ|swell-headed|swell-mobsman|Venetian swell|wind swell}}
{{zh-x|百葉窗|Venetian blinds}}
{{bor|en|la|Venetianus||]; Venetian}}
, from {{m|la|Venetia||]s of the ]; ], ]; ]}}
+ {{m|la|-anus||]}}
, from {{m|la|Veneti}}
+ {{m|la|-ia}}
. In the case of the Veneti of northern Brittany, derived from {{der|en|cel-gau|Uenetoi|t=the friendly ones, the kinsmen}}
, from {{der|en|cel-pro|*wenet}}
, a derivation from {{m|cel-pro|*wenyā|t=kindred}}
. In the case of the Veneti of northeastern Italy, of {{uncertain|en|nocap=1}}
origin but presumably taken from a {{der|en|xve|-}}
endonym, possibly Illyrian or {{der|en|cel|-}}
. Equivalent to {{m|en|Veneto}}
or {{suffix|en|Venetia|ian}}
.{{audio|en|LL-Q1860 (eng)-Vealhurl-Venetian.wav|a=Southern England}}
{{lb|en|linguistics}}
Of or related to Venetian, the local language or Italian dialect spoken in the city.{{lb|en|colloquial}}
A Venetian blind.{{quote-book|en|year=1859|author=w:Mowbray Thomson|title=The Story of Cawnpore|passage=We never saw her ladyship, but the attendants told us, that the '''Venetians''' of her apartments were not impenetrably opaque from within, and that the old lady had seen us, and was concerned for our welfare.}}
{{wikipedia|Venetian language}}
{{trans-top|form of Venetian spoken in Venice}}
{{R:OED Online|Venetian|pos=''n.'' and ''adj.''|noformat=1|id=9739768608}}
{{w|Shakespeare}}'s ] plays lie between the early modern republic described in Chapter 2, and all the subsequent '''Venices''' of our experience, education and imagination, {{...}}}}
{{syn|en|Venetian|venetian|jill-mill|q3=India, obsolete}}
{{RQ:Landon Romance|page=115|volume=II|passage=The rest of the apartment was filled with that soft green light where the noon is excluded by '''Venetian blinds''', or the still softer shadow of creeping plants:...}}
{{RQ:Conrad Heart of Darkness|page=199|passage=A narrow and deserted street in deep shadow, high houses, innumerable windows with '''Venetian blinds''', a dead silence, grass sprouting between the stones, imposing carriage archways right and left, immense double doors standing ponderously ajar.}}
{{l|en|fibreglass}}
, {{l|en|fiberglass}}
{{unc|en|nocap=1}}
.[2] Compare {{cog|it|ghetto}}
.{{quote-book|en|author=Jodi Brody|title=Portrait Painting with Classical Old Masters Techniques: A Guide to Using the Venetian Methods|location=|publisher=]|year=2008|page=58|isbn=978-0-557-01529-0|passage=Once you have chosen which color of underpainting you will use, you should apply the paint to get the values, lighting, and the likeness perfect. The underpainting is applied using a '''couch''' of medium and the paint is worked into that medium in very small amounts and in small areas at a time. {{...}} Your paint should glide and then melt into the '''couch''' as you work the paint with your brush.}}
{{RQ:Shakespeare Merchant of Venice Q1|act=II|scene=ix|page=108|passage=Madam, there is '''a-lighted''' at your gate / A yong Venetian, one that comes before / To ſignifie th'approaching of his Lord, / From whom he bringeth ſenſible regreets; {{...}}}}
{{quote-book|en|year=1807|author=William Wordsworth|title=Poems in Two Volumes|chapter=On the Extinction of the Venetian Republic|passage=Once did she hold the gorgeous East in '''fee''';}}
{{w|Lido di Venezia}}
), an island with a long beach in Venice, Italy, site of Europe’s first modern beach resort (1857), from {{der|en|it|lido|t=beach, shore}}
, from {{der|en|la|litus|t=shore}}
(hence also {{cog|en|littoral|t=of the shore}}
). The name is aspirational, evoking glamorous Venice; compare {{w|Venetian Pool}}
, another outdoor pool named for Venice.{{anagrams|en|a=aeeinntv|Venetian}}
{{quote-journal|en|author=J. Pelouze |title=On a New Aventurine, with Chrome as a Base|editors=w:David Brewster; ]; William Francis|journal=]|location=London|publisher=],{{nb...|Red Lion Court, Fleet Street}}, printers and publishers to the {{w|University of London}}; sold by ]; |month=December|year=1865|volume=XXX (Fourth Series)|issue=205|page=456|pageurl=https://books.google.com/books?id=d4k7AQAAMAAJ&pg=PA456|oclc=32062646|passage=With 40 grms. of the bichromate, the fusion is decidedly more difficult, and the glass is filled with extremely brilliant crystals. Those persons who saw specimens of this glass, at once compared it to Venetian '''aventurine''', and called it chrome '''aventurine''', which name I propose to retain. Chrome '''aventurine''' sparkles in the sun and in strongly lighted places; in this respect it is surpassed by diamond alone. It is harder than common glass, which it scratches and cuts easily, and is especially harder than the Venetian '''aventurine'''; hence its greater value.}}
{{cite-book|it|title=Grammatica Veneta|trans-title=Venetian Grammar|author=Silvano Belloni|year=2009|isbn=978-8860580825|publisher=Esedra Editrice|page=75|url=http://www.linguaveneta.net/grammatica-veneta/}}
{{RQ:Chesterton Man Who Knew Too Much|pages=80–81|pageref=81|chapter=The Hole in the Wall|passage=The boisterous Bulmer playfully made a pass at him with his drawn sword, going forward with the lunge in the proper fencing fashion, and making a somewhat too familiar '''Shakespearean''' quotation about a rodent and a Venetian coin.}}
{{der4|en|Aleppo soap|bile soap|carbolic soap|Castile soap|curd soap|dish soap|docusoap|don't drop the soap|drop the soap|glass soap|hand soap|hard soap|hospital soap|Joe Soap|know from a bar of soap|laundry soap|liquid soap|lithium soap|marine soap|mahogany soap|Marseille soap|metallic soap|mountain soap|Nabulsi soap|no soap|poor man's soap|Marseilles soap|rock soap|saddle soap|saltwater soap|sandsoap|shave soap|shaving soap|soft soap|soap acacia|soapbark|soapberry|soapbox|soap box|mercury soap|quicksilver soap|soap boy|soap bubble|soap brick|soapcurd|soap dish|soap dodger|soapery|soap film|soap flake|soap foam|soapland|soaplock|soapmaker|soapmaking|soapman|soapnut|soap opera|soap-operatic|soap ring|soap pad|soap pan|soap plant|soaprock|soaproot|soapstar|soapstock|soapstone|soap scum|soapsuds|soaptree|soap test|soapweed|soapwood|soapworks|soapwort|soapy|sodium soap|stainless steel soap|sugar soap|sulfur soap|sulphur soap|supersoap|Venice soap|wash one's brain out with soap|Windsor soap|soap tree|soft-soap|Spanish soap|yellow soap|bar soap|body soap|facial soap|soap bar|soap dispenser|soap suds|soap up|soap-dodging|soapless soap|Venetian soap|household soap|paste soap|soapball|soapwell|soapbloom|soap gourd|soap shaker|soap night}}
{{quote-book|en|year=1980|author=w:Colin Thubron|title=Seafarers: The Venetians|page=33|passage=The Byzantines, wrote {{w|Robert of Clari}}, hooted and jeered from the battlements, "and let down their '''clouts''' and showed them their backsides."}}
{{hyponyms|en|roller blind|Venetian blind}}
{{quote-book|en|year=2014| title=The Last Time I Saw Jane|author=Kate Pullinger | page=| passage=Nowhere the glitter of a glass casement; Venetian blinds,''' jalousies''', closed every window, and rooms projected in all directions to catch the luxury of a through-draft of air.}}
{{syn|en|larch turpentine|Venetian turpentine}}
{{l|en|Venetian}}
{{RQ:Addison Italy|chapter=Venice|page=84|passage= Noble ''Venetian'', vvho is ſtill a Merchant, told me, they vvill ſpeedily find out ſome Method to redreſs it; probably by making a free Port, for they look vvith an '''Evil Eye''' upon ''Leghorne'', that dravvs to it moſt of the Veſſels bound for ''Italy''.}}
{{RQ:Jonson Cynthia's Revels|passage=The Venetian '''dop''' this}}
{{quote-book|de|year=1795|author=Johann Wolfgang von Goethe|title=Venetianische Epigramme|url=https://www.gutenberg.org/cache/epub/5326/pg5326.html|chapter=XXXIV b)|passage=Niemals '''frug''' ein Kaiser nach mir, es hat sich kein König / Um mich bekümmert, und Er war mir August und Mäzen}}
{{bor|en|sq|Fier}}
, from {{m|sq|fier||fern}}
. Alternatively borrowed from {{bor|en|it|fiera||trade fair}}
due to the arrival of Venetian merchants during the Renaissance.[3]{{m|sq|fier||fern}}
. Alternatively borrowed from {{bor|sq|it|fiera||trade fair}}
due to the arrival of Venetian merchants during the Renaissance.{{gloss|indoor blind consisting of parallel stripes or slats}}
{{quote-book|en|year=1968|author=w:William J. Bouwsma|title=Venice and the Defense of Republican Liberty: Renaissance Values in the Age of Counter Reformation|page=219|text=And Paruta’s work also suggests that Venetians in the generation following the battle of Lepanto, although without altogether abandoning '''systematic''' views, were tending increasingly to look to history for their understanding of human affairs.}}
{{RQ:Wilde Dorian Gray|text=Mrs. Erlynne, a '''pushing''' nobody, with a delightful lisp and Venetian-red hair{{...}}|XV}}
{{quote-book|en|year=1980|author=Colin Thubron|title=Seafarers: The Venetians|page=43|passage=A quartet of '''porphyry''' warriors, locked for all time in stern embrace outside St. Mark's Basilica, were probably carved in the Fourth Century. They are believed to represent the Roman Emperor Diocletian and the three men who held power with him.}}
{{quote-journal|en|author= Paulding]]|title=The Mississippi|editors= Graham]]; Griswold]]|magazine=]|location=Philadelphia, Pa.|publisher=George R. Graham,{{nb...|No. 98 Chesnut Street.}}|month=April|year=1843|volume=XXII|issue=4|page=218|pageurl=https://books.google.com/books?id=PmU3AQAAMAAJ&pg=RA1-PA218|column=1|oclc=426033873|passage=These little rooms have each a half glass door, which opens on a gallery running all round the boat, with only the interruption of the '''wheel-houses''', outside of which is a door of Venetian blinds, which being thrown open, you can sit in your room and see every object on one side of the river.}}
{{quote-book|en|year=1980|author=w:Colin Thubron|title=Seafarers: The Venetians|page=41|passage=An enameled miniature of Christ is set in the center of a jeweled '''alabaster''' paten, the plate that holds the bread during Communion services.}}
{{glossary|noun}}
is borrowed from {{bor|en|fr|gazettier}}
{{qualifier|archaic}}
, {{m|fr|gazetier|t=journalist, newspaperman}}
+ English {{m|en|-eer|pos={{glossary|suffix}} forming {{glossary|agent noun}}s denoting people associated with or engaged in a specified activities}}
.[4] {{m|fr||Gazettier}}
, {{m|fr||gazetier}}
are derived from {{m|fr|gazette|t=newspaper}}
+ {{m|fr|-ier|pos=suffix denoting a profession}}
; and {{m|fr||gazette}}
from {{der|en|it|gazzetta}}
, from {{der|en|vec|gazeta}}
, from {{m|vec|] ] ]|lit=a ''gazeta'' of news}}
(referring to the cost of the newspaper, a gazeta being a Venetian coin of little value, whence {{cog|en|gazet}}
{{qualifier|obsolete}}
), possibly a {{glossary|diminutive}}
of {{der|en|la|gaza|t=riches, treasure; treasury}}
, ultimately from {{der|en|xme-old|*ganǰam|t=treasure; wealth}}
. The English word is analysable as {{suffix|en|gazette|eer}}
.{{ISBN|9781425987909}}
{{quote-book|en|year=1980|author=w:Colin Thubron|title=Seafarers: The Venetians|page=40|passage=On the 11th Century glass bowl above, the painted figures—winged '''genii''', nude athletes and brawny soldiers—resemble mythological characters but may be only lighthearted mimicry of ancient Greek or Roman subjects.}}
{{bor|en|fr|pococurante}}
, itself - from {{m|fr|Pococurante}}
, a nonchalant Venetian senator in {{w|Candide}}
, coined by {{w|Voltaire}}
based on {{uder|en|it|poco||little}}
+ {{m|it|curante||caring}}
.{{lb|it|numismatics}}
an unidentified Venetian coin of the late Renaissance{{quote-book|en|year=1980|author=Colin Thubron|title=Seafarers: The Venetians|page=121|passage=During three decades of peace the Venetian battle fleet had stagnated, but soon, once again, reserve galleys were pushing out of the Arsenal. A colossal '''quadrireme''' constructed by the scholar-turned-shipwright Vettor Fausto was loaded with batteries of cannon.}}
{{quote-book|en |year=1998 |title=Tennis:Cultural History |author=Heiner Gillmeister |page=xi|ISBN=|passage=The more superficial beholder of the book's cover (a magnificent piece of artistry by the Venetian painter Gabriel Bella) will have failed to notice, on its continuation overleaf, the employee of an ancient '''''jeu de paume''''' who, having scaled the slanting roof of the gallery, is busily retrieving from the dusty recesses of the window-sill the stray tennis balls from below.}}
{{w|Lazzaretto Vecchio}}
(Old Lazzaretto) is an island in the {{w|Venetian Lagoon}}
, Venice, Italy, used between 1403 and 1630 to house a hospital for people infected with plague and as a leper colony.{{quote-book|en|author=Wylliam Thomas ]]|chapter= Of Common Prouision and Charitable Deedes.|title=The Historye of Italye.{{nb...|A Booke Exceding Profitable to be Red because It Intreateth of the Astate of Many and Dyuers Common Weales, How They Haue Bene, and now Be Gouerned.}}|location=London|publisher={{...|Imprinted at London in Fletestrete nere to Sainct Dunstons Church by}} Thomas Parishe|year=1561|section=folio 83, recto|sectionurl=https://archive.org/details/historyeofitalye00thom/page/n192/mode/1up|oclc=837726688|passage=For the plague, there is an houſe of many lodgeingꝭ , two miles from Venice, called the '''''Lazaretta''''', vnto the which all they of that houſe, wherin one hath been infected of the plague, are incontinẽtly ſent, and a lodgeyng ſufficiente appoincted for theim till the infection ceaſſe, that they may retourne.}}
{{RQ:Coryat Crudities|chapter=My Obseruations of the Most Glorious, Peerelesse, and Mayden Citie of Venice:{{nb...|I Call It Mayden because It was Neuer Conquered.}}|pages=214–215|pageref=215|passage=For they both ſay and beleeue that this picture hath ſo great vertue, as alſo that of Padua, whereof I haue before ſpoken, that whenſoeuer it is carried abroad in a ſolemne proceſſion in the time of a great drougth, it will cauſe raine to deſcend from heauen either before it is brought backe into the Church, or very ſhortly after. {{...}} I cannot be induced to attribute ſo much to the vertue of a picture, as the Venetians do, except I had ſeene ſome notable miracle wrought by the ſame. For it brought no drops at all with it: onely about two dayes after it rained (I muſt needes confeſſe) '''amaine'''. But I hope they are not ſo ſuperſtitious to aſcribe that to the vertue of the picture.}}
{{w|Vittore Carpaccio}}
, a Venetian painter known for using red and white tones. For the surname, see {{m|it|Carpaccio}}
.{{syn|it|fenocio|q1=Venetian slang}}
{{syn|it|omosessuale|fenocio|q2=Venetian slang|frocio|ricchione}}
{{inh+|ro|la|captāre}}
, present active infinitive of {{m|la|captō}}
. Phonetically, it may have resulted from the merger of more than one Latin word originally; the variant form căta is likely derived from the {{inh|ro|VL.|-}}
form *cattāre (compare Spanish and Portuguese {{m|es|catar}}
, Venetian {{m|vec|catar}}
), but various other etymologies have been proposed for the standard form: it has been considered by some as originating from or being influenced by a root *cavitāre, from cavitum, popular form of {{m|la|cautum}}
, or from *cautāre, as a verbal derivative of {{m|la|cautus}}
, or from *cabtāre, as an incorrect pronunciation of {{m|la|captāre}}
, on the basis of a similar transformation from Latin in cases such as {{m|la|presbyter}}
> Romanian {{m|ro|preot}}
. Compare also {{cog|rup|caftu|caftu, cãftari}}
.{{gloss|relating to the typography style used by Venetian printer {{w|Aldus Manutius}}}}
{{trans-top|long island in the Venetian Lagoon}}
{{l|en|Giudecca}}
{{gloss|long island in the Venetian Lagoon}}
{{gloss|blind consisting of overlapping horizontal slats}}
{{inh|de|gmh|Venēdige}}
, {{m|gmh|Venēdje}}
, from {{der|de|vec|venedego|t=Venetian}}
, from {{der|de|la|veneticus}}
.{{q|Venetian}}
{{coi|pl|weneckie '''biennale'''|Venetian '''biennale'''}}
{{ux|orv|Афетово же колѣно и то Варѧзи . Свеи . Оурманє . Готѣ . '''Русь''' . Аглѧнѣ . Галичанѣ . Волохове . Римлѧнѣ . Нѣмци . Корлѧзи . Венедици . Фрѧговѣ . и прочии присѣдѧть ѿ запада къ полуденью. и съсѣдѧтсѧ съ племенем̑ Хамовомъ.|The offspring of ] were the ]s, ], ], ], '''''Rusĭ''''', ], ], ]s, ], ], ''Korlyazi'' , ], ''Fryazi'' and others. In the west they are ajacent to the southern countries, and neighbours with the ]s.}}
{{w|lang=en|Marco Polo}}
(1254–1324), Venetian merchant, whose travels were documented in a book that introduced Europeans to Central Asia and China. The {{der|en|it|-}}
name is from {{der|en|la|Marcus}}
+ {{m|la|Paulus}}
.{{l|en|Venetian white}}
, {{l|en|spirits of Saturn}}
{{quote-book|en|author=Eleanor Selfridge-Field|title=A New Chronology of Venetian Opera and Related Genres, 1660–1760|location=Stanford, Calif.|publisher=w:Stanford University Press|year=2007|page=597|column=2|isbn=978-0-8047-4437-9|passage=The humor in this work maps Turkish history onto the traditional masks of ''commedia dell’arte'': the sultan (Bayezid/Bajazet) is played by “Pantalone” (described as a “virtuoso of the '''serraglio''' of the Tartars”), while his daughter Asteria (an ''accademica'' “Scordata”) is played by “Flaminia,” and his general Osmano by the “Dottore.”}}
{{sense|Veneti or Venetian}}
{{l|grc|Βενετός}}
{{lb|grc|Koine|Byzantine Greek}}
A Venetian{{m|gkm|κάττα}}
and the simplified spelling {{m|gkm|κάτα}}
survives in modern form {{m|el|κάτα}}
, diminutives (as {{m|el|κατσούλα}}
), dialectal and regional. From {{der|el|LL.|catta}}
. Also see the masculine {{m|el|γάτος}}
, from {{der|el|LL.|cattus}}
.{{inh|rup|la|venetus||sea-colored, bluish; Venetian}}
. Compare {{cog|ro|vânăt}}
.{{inh+|fr|fro|Venicien}}
, from {{der|fr|ML.|Venetianus}}
, from {{der|fr|la|Venetia}}
.{{lb|fr|relational}}
of Venice; Venetian{{feminine singular of|fr|vénitien|t=], relating to Venice}}
{{w|Venetian-style shoe}}
{{lb|nrf|Jersey}}
Venetian blind{{bor|el|it|veneziano||]}}
, from {{m|it|Venezia||]}}
+ {{m|it|-iano||]}}
. Equivalent to {{suffix|el|Βενέτσια|νός}}
.{{synonym of|el|Βενετός|nodot=1}}
, Venetian, {{n-g|an inhabitant of Venice}}
{{quote-book|en|year=1939|author=w:Robert E. Howard|title=s:Gates of Empire|text=The Venetian captain, prodding among the butts and bales of the cargo, had discovered a stowaway--a fat, sandy-haired man in worn leather, snoring '''bibulously''' among the barrels.}}
{{anagrams|en|a=aeeinnstv|Venetians}}
{{bor|hu|it}}
. Compare {{m|it|venedigo||Venetian}}
, {{m|it|venetico|t=Venetic}}
, from {{der|hu|la|Veneti}}
, name of an ancient people of possibly Illyrian origin.[6]{{lb|it|regional|chiefly|Venetian}}
a sort of handcrafted ceramic whistle{{quote-book|en|year=1980|author=w:Colin Thubron|title=Seafarers: The Venetians|page=40|passage=The large chalice at right is carved from a single chunk of '''sardonyx''', a kind of onyx. Its gilded rim and base are decorated with tiny enamels depicting a host of popular saints, including Nicephorus (farthest left on rim), a Ninth Century patriarch and opponent of a religious movement to destroy icons.}}
{{sense|town in Peloponnese, Greece}}
{{l|en|Methone}}
, {{l|en|Mothone}}
{{q|ancient contexts}}
; {{l|en|Modon}}
, {{l|en|Modone}}
{{q|early modern Venetian contexts}}
{{alternative spelling of|en|Venetian}}
{{RQ:Coryat Crudities|chapter=My Obseruations of the Most Glorious, Peerelesse, and Mayden Citie of Venice:{{nb...|I Call It Mayden because It was Neuer Conquered.}}|pages=214–215|pageref=215|passage=For they both ſay and beleeue that this picture hath ſo great vertue, as alſo that of Padua, whereof I haue before ſpoken, that whenſoeuer it is carried abroad in a ſolemne proceſſion in the time of a great drougth, it will cauſe raine to deſcend from heauen either before it is brought backe into the Church, or very ſhortly after. {{...}} I cannot be induced to attribute ſo much to the vertue of a picture, as the Venetians do, except I had ſeene ſome notable miracle wrought by the ſame. For it brought no drops at all with it: onely about two dayes after it rained (I muſt '''needes''' confeſſe) amaine. But I hope they are not ſo ſuperſtitious to aſcribe that to the vertue of the picture.}}
{{quote-book|en|year=1907|author=Ronald M. Burrows|title=The Discoveries In Crete|page=60|text={{...}}} the extraordinary thinness of the walls of these vases, which reminds us of the finest china, or even of Venetian glass. Some of them have elements in their designs stamped out into low relief to represent the '''repoussé''' ornament natural to such metal-work.}}
{{lb|de|relational}}
Venetian{{gloss|person}}
{{gloss|Venetian boat}}
{{quote-book|en|year=1980|author=w:Colin Thubron|title=Seafarers: The Venetians|page=41|passage=An enameled miniature of Christ is set in the center of a jeweled alabaster '''paten''', the plate that holds the bread during Communion services.}}
{{af|grc|Ἐνετοί|-ίᾱ|t1=]; ]; ]s}}
.{{wikipedia|mul=lira lombardo-veneta|mullabel=Lombardo-Venetian pound|lang=it}}
{{bor|sq|ota|بالیوس|tr=balyos}}
,[7] ultimately from {{der|sq|vec|bailo|t=title of a Venetian ambassador}}
; reflecting in the sea-monster meaning a negative attitude towards Venetocracy in Albania.{{bor|kmr|ota|بالیوس|بالیوز|tr=balyoz|t=title of the Venetian ambassador to the {{w|Sublime Porte}}; title of any European envoy}}
, from {{der|kmr|vec|bailo|t=title of a Venetian ambassador}}
.{{quote-book|en|author=Michael Krondl|chapter=Sugar and Spice: Italy|title=Sweet Invention: A History of Dessert|location=Chicago, Ill.|publisher=w:Chicago Review Press|year=2011|page=119|pageurl=https://archive.org/details/sweetinventionhi0000kron/page/119/mode/1up|isbn=978-1-55652-954-2|passage=Each year it becomes increasingly difficult to find traditional foods in Venice. There’s no market for them. All that tourists seem to want to eat is mass market gelato and '''döner kebaps''', and the native Venetians are dying out.}}
{{gloss|a Venetian boatman who propels a ]}}
{{quote-book|en|author=Paula Weideger|title=Venetian Dreaming|location=New York, N.Y.|publisher=Washington Square Press, ]|year=2002|page=146|isbn=0-671-04729-9|passage=The whole wide, long sweep of the room was decorated with paneled plasterwork done by the hand of the same eighteenth-century master craftsman who had worked in the '''stucchi'''.}}
{{ISBN|978-0-8122-3562-3}}
){{inflection of|de|Venetianer||gen|s}}
{{bor|kk|ru|каранти́н}}
, from {{der|kk|it|quarantina||forty days}}
, the period Venetians customarily kept ships from plague-ridden countries waiting off port, from {{der|kk|la|quadrāgintā||forty}}
.{{l|el|Βενετός|g=m|gloss=male Venetian}}
, {{l|el|Βενετή|g=f|gloss=female Venetian}}
{{l|el|βενετικός|gloss=Venetian|pos=adj.}}
<small>
2009-03-09 06:02 z</small>
{{sense|ancient peoples or Veneto}}
{{l|en|Venetian}}
{{l|en|Venetian}}
{{ux|xcl|վանդակ պատուհանի|t=blinds, Venetian blinds|inline=1}}
{{q|Venetian boat}}
{{quote-book|en|year=1707|author=Alexander Justice; Samuel Ricard|title=A General Treatise of Monies and Exchanges; In which those of all Trading Nations are particularly described and considered|page=12|pageurl=https://archive.org/details/generaltreatiseo0000alex/page/n121|passage=The Turkish Sultani, or Egyptian '''Xeriff''', being a Gold Coin, with which the Barbary and Venetian Chequeens and Marienberg Ducat, very near agree to 53 1/2 Grains.}}
{{lb|xcl|in the plural}}
Venetian pearls, beads, glass beads, bugle{{bor+|sw|acx|بالوز|tr=bālōz}}
, from {{der|sw|ar|باليوز|tr=balyōz}}
, from {{der|sw|ota|بالیوز|tr=balyoz}}
, {{m|ota|بالیوس|tr=balyos|t=title of the Venetian ambassador to the {{w|Sublime Porte}}; title of any European envoy}}
, from {{der|sw|vec|bailo|t=title of a Venetian ambassador}}
.[8]{{coi|pl|'''aksamit''' wenecki|Venetian '''velvet'''}}
{{lb|ota|historical}}
levend, a soldier recruited in eastern countries who worked in Venetian ships{{plural of|en|Venetian swell}}
{{lb|it|Northern Italy|especially|Venetian}}
peanuts{{...}}, sometimes some tunny '''''ventresca''''', and nutmeg, {{...}}}}
{{alternative form of|it|clinto|from=Alternative, especially Venetian,}}
{{l-self|en|Venetian red}}
,<ref>
tag;
no text was provided for refs named Voeg
{{cite-web|title=History of the City|url=http://bashkiafier.gov.al/?page_id=2518|accessdate=12 August 2011|archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20110812061045/http://bashkiafier.gov.al/?page_id=2518|archivedate=12 August 2011}}
{{R:OED Online|pos=n|id=3592261730|date=July 2023|nodot=1}}
; {{R:Lexico|pos=n}}
{{R:UESz}}
{{R:Zaicz 2006}}
{{R:sq:Bufli-Rocchi|page=59}}
{{R:sw:Brook:2022|page=8|text=‘Ambassador’, Sw ''balozi''. From OAr ''bālōz'' ‘consul’ (R: 76), ultimately from Venetian ''bailo'' (by way of Turkish).}}