brits

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See also: Brits

English

English Wikipedia has an article on:
Wikipedia

Pronunciation

Noun

brits

  1. plural of brit

Anagrams

Dutch

Etymology

From Middle Dutch bryts (lattice), from Middle High German britze, from Old High German .

Pronunciation

Noun

brits f (plural britsen)

  1. a berth, a bunk

Latvian

Latvian Wikipedia has an article on:
Wikipedia lv

Etymology

Ultimately from Latin Brittō or its Celtic equivalent (see Brython), probably via some other European language (cf. German Brite, Russian бритт (britt)).

Pronunciation

Noun

brits m (1st declension, feminine form: britiete)

  1. a Briton, a British man, a man born in Great Britain; a citizen of the United Kingdom
    es esmu britsI am a British man
  2. (genitive plural): British; pertaining to Great Britain or the United Kingdom and its people
    britu armijathe British army
    Britu impērijathe British Empire
    Britu KolumbijaBritish Columbia (Canadian province)
  3. (loosely) an Englishman
  4. (historical, in the plural) the Britons, members of the Celtic tribes that lived in southern Britain at the time of the Roman conquest
    5. gadsimtā pirms mūsu ēras Britu salas iekaroja ķeltu ciltis: briti un skotiin the 5th century BC Celtic tribes - the Britons and the Scots (Gaels) - conquered the British Isles

Declension

Synonyms

Derived terms

Swedish

Swedish Wikipedia has an article on:
Wikipedia sv

Etymology

From Low German britsche, briske, from Low German bret (board). Attested since circa 1780. Cognate of German Pritsche, Danish brisk, Old High German britissa. Doublet of bräde.

Noun

brits c

  1. cot (simple bench to lie down on)

Declension

Declension of brits
nominative genitive
singular indefinite brits brits
definite britsen britsens
plural indefinite britsar britsars
definite britsarna britsarnas

References