doble
doble m or f (masculine and feminine plural dobles)
dóble
doble
doble (imperative dobl or doble, present tense dobler, passive dobles, simple past and past participle dobla or doblet)
doble
From Old Occitan, from Latin dūplus.
doble m (feminine singular dobla, masculine plural dobles, feminine plural doblas)
doble m (oblique and nominative feminine singular doble)
← 1 | 2 | 3 → |
---|---|---|
Cardinal: dos Ordinal: segundo Ordinal abbreviation: 2.º Multiplier: doble Collective: ambos Fractional: medio, mitad | ||
Spanish Wikipedia article on 2 |
From Latin duplus or duplex; if from the former, it is uncertain whether it was inherited or not, and may have been taken from a Catalan or Provençal intermediate, as the final '-e' rather than '-o' is unexpected. If from the latter, it is possible that it came from a Vulgar Latin *duplem as a variant accusative to Latin duplex (rather than the normal duplicem), formed analogically. Alternatively, it may derive from duple, the vocative of duplus, though this is less likely. The word may have also simply undergone a change of suffix internally within Spanish; an old form doblo was attested, but only in a legal sense.[1] Compare Galician dobre, Portuguese dobro. Cf. also duplo and dúplex, which were later borrowed from Latin and may be doublets.
doble m or f (masculine and feminine plural dobles)
doble m (plural dobles)
doble m or f by sense (plural dobles)
See the etymology of the corresponding lemma form.
doble
20 | ||
← 1 | 2 | 3 → , |
---|---|---|
Cardinal: dalawa Spanish cardinal: dos Ordinal: ikalawa, pangalawa Spanish ordinal: segundo, segunda Ordinal abbreviation: ika-2, pang-2 Adverbial: makalawa, makadalawa Multiplier: doble, dalawang ibayo Distributive: tigdalawa, dalawahan, dala-dalawa Restrictive: dadalawa Fractional: kalahati | ||
Tagalog Wikipedia article on 2 |
doble (Baybayin spelling ᜇᜓᜊ᜔ᜎᜒ)
doble (Baybayin spelling ᜇᜓᜊ᜔ᜎᜒ)