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English
A man playing a lute
Pronunciation
Etymology 1
From Middle French lut (modern luth ), from Old French leüt , probably from Old Occitan laüt , from Arabic اَلْعُود ( al-ʕūd , “ wood ” ) (probably representing an Andalusian Arabic or North African pronunciation). Doublet of oud , lavta , and laouto .
Noun
lute (plural lutes )
A fretted stringed instrument , similar to the guitar , having a bowl-shaped body or soundbox ; any of a wide variety of chordophones with a pear-shaped body and a neck whose upper surface is in the same plane as the soundboard , with strings along the neck and parallel to the soundboard.
Coordinate term: guitar
Derived terms
Translations
References
Verb
lute (third-person singular simple present lutes , present participle luting , simple past and past participle luted )
To play on a lute, or as if on a lute.
1820 , John Keats , “(please specify the poem) ”, in Lamia, Isabella, the Eve of St. Agnes, and Other Poems , London: [Thomas Davison ] for Taylor and Hessey , , →OCLC :in the air , her new voice luting soft
See also
Etymology 2
From Old French lut , ultimately from Latin lutum ( “ mud ” ) .
Noun
lute (countable and uncountable , plural lutes )
Thick sticky clay or cement used to close up a hole or gap, especially to make something air-tight .
1830 , Thomas Thomson (chemist) , The History of Chemistry , volume 1, page 41 :He employed a mixture of flour and white of egg spread upon a linen cloth to cement cracked glass vessels, and used other lute s for similar purposes.
A packing ring, as of rubber, for fruit jars, etc.
( brickmaking ) A straight-edged piece of wood for striking off superfluous clay from earth.
Translations
Thick sticky clay or cement
A straight-edged piece of wood
Verb
lute (third-person singular simple present lutes , present participle luting , simple past and past participle luted )
To fix or fasten something with lute.
1888 , Rudyard Kipling, ‘A Friend's Friend’, Plain Tales from the Hills , Folio Society, published 2005 , page 179 :To protect everything till it dried, a man [ …] luted a big blue paper cap from a cracker, with meringue-cream, low down on Jevon's forehead.
Derived terms
Further reading
Anagrams
Lower Sorbian
Pronunciation
Adjective
lute
inflection of luty :
neuter nominative / accusative singular
nominative / accusative plural
Middle Dutch
Etymology
(This etymology is missing or incomplete. Please add to it, or discuss it at the Etymology scriptorium .)
Noun
lute f
lute
Inflection
This noun needs an inflection-table template .
Descendants
Further reading
Middle Low German
Etymology
Borrowed from Middle French leut ( “ lute, stringed instrument with a wide corpus ” ) , from Old French leüt ( “ lute ” ) , probably from Old Occitan laüt , from Arabic اَلْعُود ( al-ʕūd , “ wood ” ) .
Pronunciation
Noun
lûte f
A lute .
Norwegian Nynorsk
Etymology 1
From Old Norse lúta , from Proto-Germanic *lūtaną .
Verb
lute (present tense lutar /luter , past tense luta /lutte , past participle luta /lutt , passive infinitive lutast , present participle lutande , imperative lute /lut )
( intransitive ) to bend over
Etymology 2
From the noun lut m or f ( “ lye ” ) .
Verb
lute (present tense lutar , past tense luta , past participle luta , passive infinitive lutast , present participle lutande , imperative lute /lut )
( transitive ) to soak , treat in lye
Etymology 3
From Old Norse hluta , from Proto-Germanic *hlutōną .
luta ( a-infinitive )
lùta , lùte ( alternative spelling )
Verb
lute (present tense lutar , past tense luta , past participle luta , passive infinitive lutast , present participle lutande , imperative lute /lut )
to allot
References
“lute” in The Nynorsk Dictionary .
Anagrams
Polish
Pronunciation
IPA (key ) : /ˈlu.tɛ/
Rhymes: -utɛ
Syllabification: lu‧te
Adjective
lute
inflection of luty :
neuter nominative / accusative / vocative singular
nonvirile nominative / accusative / vocative plural
Noun
lute m inan
nominative / accusative / vocative plural of luty
Portuguese
Verb
lute
inflection of lutar :
first / third-person singular present subjunctive
third-person singular imperative
Unami
Etymology
From
/lu/: to burn
/te/: makes word an inanimate verb
/-w / (suffix ) : third person suffix
Cognate with Munsee lóoteew ( “ it burns ” ) .
Verb
lute inan (plural luteyo , 3sg conjunct lutèk ) ( vii )
( inanimate , intransitive ) it burned , it is burned
References
Rementer, Jim with Pearson, Bruce L. (2005 ) “lute ”, in Leneaux, Grant, Whritenour, Raymond, editors, The Lenape Talking Dictionary , The Lenape Language Preservation Project