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English
Pronunciation
Etymology 1
A leopard seal .
From Middle English sele , from an inflectional form of Old English seolh , from Proto-West Germanic *selh , from Proto-Germanic *selhaz (compare Scots selch ,selkie , North Frisian selich , Middle Dutch seel , zēle , Old High German selah , Danish sæl , Middle Low German sale ), either from Proto-Indo-European *selk- ( “ to pull ” ) (compare dialectal English sullow ( “ plough ” ) ) or from early Proto-Finnic *šülkeš (later *hülgeh , compare dialectal Finnish hylki , standard hylje , Estonian hüljes ).
Noun
seal (plural seals )
A pinniped (Pinnipedia ), particularly an earless seal (true seal ) or eared seal .
The seals in the harbor looked better than they smelled.
Hyponyms
Derived terms
acme seal Arctic seal , arctic seal Atlantic gray seal , Atlantic grey seal Baikal seal bay seal bearded seal bottle-nosed seal Caspian seal common seal crab-eater seal , crabeater seal crab-eating seal crawling seal crested seal eared seal earless seal elephant seal fur seal , fur-seal gray seal , grey seal Greenland seal hair seal , hair-seal harbor seal , harbour seal harp seal , harp-seal Hawaiian monk seal heart seal hooded seal Hudson bay seal , Hudson seal jar seal kid seal Ladoga seal land seal Larga seal leonine seal leopard seal leporine seal maned seal marbled seal monk seal , monk-seal native seal pied seal pin seal ribbon seal ringed seal river seal rock seal Ross seal rough seal saddleback seal seal-bird seal bomb seal brown , seal-brown seal calf sealchie seal-cloth seal dog seal dribble sealery seal-fin deformity seal finger seal fingers seal-fish seal-fisher seal-fishing seal-fur seal-grain seal-hole seal-hunter seal-hunting seal limbs seal-lynx point seal-man seal-oil , seal oil seal-plush seal point , sealpoint seal rookery seal row seal shark sealskin seal-tortie lynx point seal-tortie point seal-vat small-ringed seal spotted seal square flipper seal swan-necked seal thong seal true seal ursine seal walking seal Weddell seal , Weddell's seal
Descendants
Translations
pinniped
Abkhaz: атиулен ( atʼiwlen )
Afrikaans: rob , seehond (af)
Ainu: トッカリ ( tokkari ) , トゥカㇻ ( tukar ) , トゥッカㇻ ( tukkar ) , トゥコロ ( tukoro )
Albanian: fokë (sq) f
Arabic: فُقْمَة f ( fuqma )
Gulf Arabic: فقمة f ( faqma )
Hijazi Arabic: فَقْمَة f ( faqma, fagma )
Aragonese: foca f
Armenian: փոկ (hy) ( pʻok ) , ծովաշուն (hy) ( covašun )
Old Armenian: փոկ ( pʻok )
Asturian: foca (ast) f , llobu marín (ast)
Atikamekw: akikw
Azerbaijani: suiti (az)
Basque: itsas txakur
Belarusian: цюле́нь m ( cjuljénʹ )
Breton: reunig m
Bulgarian: тюле́н (bg) m ( tjulén )
Burmese: ရေသူ (my) ( resu )
Catalan: foca (ca) f
Central Melanau: asou daat
Cherokee: ᎠᎹᏱ ᎡᎯ ᏗᏑᏫᏍᎩ ( amayi ehi disuwisgi ) , ᎠᎹ ᏗᏑᏫᏍᎩ ( ama disuwisgi ) , ᎠᎹᏱ ᎠᏁᎯ ᏗᏑᏫᏍᎩ pl ( amayi anehi disuwisgi )
Chinese:
Cantonese: ( earless seal ) 海豹 ( hoi2 paau3 ) , ( fur seal ) 海狗 ( hoi2 gau2 )
Hokkien: ( earless seal ) 海豹 (zh-min-nan) ( hái-pà ) , ( fur seal ) 海狗 (zh-min-nan) ( hái-káu )
Mandarin: ( earless seal ) 海豹 (zh) ( hǎibào ) , ( fur seal ) 海狗 (zh) ( hǎigǒu )
Wu: 海豹 ( 5 he-pau)
Cornish: reun m
Cree: ᐋᐦᑭᐠ ( aahkik )
Crimean Tatar: tülen
Czech: lachtan (cs) m , tuleň (cs) m
Danish: sæl (da) c
Dutch: zeehond (nl) m , rob (nl) m
Esperanto: foko (eo)
Estonian: hüljes (et)
Evenki: kuma
Faroese: kópur m
Finnish: hylje (fi)
French: phoque (fr) m
Gagauz: foka
Galician: foca (gl) f , voca f , lobarraz m , lobo mariño m
Georgian: სელაპი ( selaṗi )
German: Robbe (de) f , Seehund (de) m
Greek: φώκια (el) f ( fókia )
Ancient: φώκη f ( phṓkē )
Greenlandic: puisi (kl)
Halkomelem: áshxw
Hebrew: כֶּלֶב יָם (he) m ( kelev yam )
Hindi: सील (hi) ( sīl )
Hungarian: fóka (hu)
Icelandic: selur (is) m
Ido: marohundo (io)
Inari Sami: nuárju
Indonesian: anjing laut (id)
Inuktitut: ᓇᑦᑎᖅ ( nattiq )
Inupiaq: natchiq
Irish: rón (ga) m
Old Irish: rón
Italian: foca (it) f , otaria (it) f
Japanese: 海豹 (ja) ( アザラシ , azarashi) , ( fur seal ) 膃肭臍 (ja) ( オットセイ , ottosei) , 海狗 (ja) ( オットセイ, ottosei )
Kalmyk: хав ( xav )
Karelian: hyleh
Kazakh: итбалық ( itbalyq )
Korean: ( earless seal ) 물범 ( mulbeom ) , ( fur seal ) 물개 (ko) ( mulgae )
Kven: hyljet
Latin: phoca (la) f
Latvian: ronis (lv) m
Laz: please add this translation if you can
Lithuanian: ruonis (lt) m
Luxembourgish: Séihond m
Macedonian: фока f ( foka ) ,
Malay: anjing laut , sil
Jawi: انجيڠ لاءوت , سيل (ms)
Maltese: foka f
Manchu: ᡥᡠᠸᡝᡨᡥᡳ ( huwethi )
Manx: raun f
Maori: kekeno
Middle English: sele
Mongolian:
Cyrillic: далайн хав ( dalajn xav )
Montagnais: atshikᵘ
Nivkh: лаӈр̌ ( laŋř )
Northern Sami: njuorjju , njuorju
Norwegian:
Bokmål: sel (no) m
Nynorsk: sel m
Occitan: fòca (oc) f
Old English: seolh m
Old Norse: kópr m , selr m
Ottoman Turkish: آیی بالغی ( ayı balığı )
Persian: فک (fa) ( fok )
Polish: foka (pl) f
Portuguese: foca (pt) f
Punjabi: ਸੀਲ (pa) f ( sīl )
Romanian: focă (ro) f
Romansch: foca f , chaun da mar m , tgaun da mar m , tgàn marin m
Russian: тюле́нь (ru) m ( tjulénʹ )
Saanich: ÁSW̱
Sami:
Kildin Sami: нуэррьй ( nuerr’j )
Ter Sami: ныэррье ( nïerrʹje )
Scots: selch
Scottish Gaelic: ròn m
Serbo-Croatian:
Cyrillic: ту̀љан m , фо̏ка (sh) f
Roman: tùljan (sh) m , fȍka (sh) f
Skolt Sami: nueʹrjj
Slovak: tuleň (sk) m
Slovene: tjulenj (sl) m
Sorbian:
Lower Sorbian: roba f
Southern Sami: nåervie
Spanish: foca (es) f
Swahili: sili
Swedish: säl (sv) c
Tagalog: karnerong-dagat , poka
Thai: แมวน้ำ (th) ( mɛɛo-náam )
Turkish: fok (tr)
Turkmen: suw it
Ukrainian: тюле́нь m ( tjulénʹ )
Uyghur: تىيۇلىن ( tiyulin ) , دېڭىزيىلپىزى ( dë'ngizyilpizi )
Venetan: foca
Vietnamese: hải cẩu (vi) (海狗 (vi) )
Volapük: fuk (vo) , meladog , rob
Voro: hülge
Votic: ülle
Welsh: morlo (cy) m , moelrhon (cy) , broch môr (cy)
Zulu: umnyama
Verb
seal (third-person singular simple present seals , present participle sealing , simple past and past participle sealed )
( intransitive ) To hunt seals.
They're organizing a protest against sealing .
Translations
See also
Further reading
Etymology 2
A seal on a diploma
From Middle English sele , from Anglo-Norman sëel , from Latin sigillum , a diminutive of signum ( “ sign ” ) .
Doublet of sigil and sigillum .
Noun
US presidential seal
seal (plural seals )
A stamp used to impress a design on a soft substance such as wax.
An impression of such stamp on wax, paper or other material used for sealing.
A design or insignia usually associated with an organization or an official role.
The front of the podium bore the presidential seal .
1960 March, H. P. White, “The Hawkhurst branch of the Southern Region”, in Trains Illustrated , page 170 :So the matter rested until the Cranbrook & Paddock Wood Company was incorporated on August 8, 1877, appropriately displaying a bunch of hops on its seal , for these had become the principal cash crop in the area.
Anything that secures or authenticates.
Something which will be visibly damaged if a covering or container is opened, and which may or may not bear an official design.
The result was declared invalid, as the seal on the meter had been broken.
( figurative ) Confirmation or approval, or an indication of this.
Her clothes always had her mom's seal of approval.
Something designed to prevent liquids or gases from leaking through a joint.
The canister is leaking. I think the main seal needs to be replaced.
A tight closure, secure against leakage.
Close the lid tightly to get a good seal .
A chakra . (Can we add an example for this sense?)
Derived terms
AccuPort seal apex seal balanced seal bellows seal blow fill seal blue seal Bodok seal border seal break seal break the seal Bridgman seal broad seal burning seal button seal cartridge seal Chinese seal chip seal Christmas seal clay seal collation of seals company seal compartmented seal compression seal compressor seal concentric dual seal Confederate Seal contract under seal corporate seal counter-seal crankshaft seal cup seal cylinder seal diaphragm seal door seal (aka door gasket )double balanced seal double seal dry gas seal dry seal dual seal dynamic seal enamelled seal externally pressurized seal face seal face-to-face seals farthing seal fin seal fisherman's seal , fisher's seal flange seal given under my hand and seal glass-ceramic-to-metal seal glass seal golden seal , golden-seal , goldenseal grease seal Great Seal , great seal guide seal gum-seal hand and seal Hermes' seal hermetic seal hot seal hydrodynamic seal hydrostatic seal impression seal inside-mounted seal Keeper of the Seals Knights Templar Seal labyrinth seal lady's seal lip seal LMLK seal Luther seal magnetic seal mechanical face seal mechanical seal medicine seal official seal oil seal orbital reducer seal outside-mounted seal palatal seal peripheral seal piston seal posterior palatal seal postpalatal seal presidential seal primary seal privacy seal privy seal pusher seal radial shaft seal rotary seal rotating face mechanical seal royal seal sanitary seal scaraboid seal seal assembly seal at arms , seal of arms seal-bag sealbore seal chamber seal coating seal-cup seal-cylinder seal-day seal-engraving seal face seal face width seal-flower sealing washer seal leak sealless seal-lock , seal lock Seal-Lock , Sealock seal manual seal-master seal of approval seal of confession , seal of the confessional seal-office seal of quality seal of relics Seal of Solomon seal of the demons Seal of the Prophets seal on a bedsheet seal-pipe seal point seal-press seal presser seal receptacle seal ring , seal-ring seal script seal-stamp seal stone seal swell seal-top seal-wax , sealwax seal-work seal-wort secre seal secret seal set one's seal set the seal on set to one's seal , set to seal shaft seal Solomon's seal stamp seal state seal stationary seal surface sealing sylphon seal tandem seals the seven seals trap seal unbalanced seal under one's seal , under seal Underseal , underseal under the cold seal unseal velopharyngeal seal water seal weather seal wiper seal
Descendants
Translations
stamp used to impress a design on a soft substance
Arabic: خَتْم m ( ḵatm )
Armenian: կնիք (hy) ( knikʻ )
Avar: мугьру ( muhru )
Azerbaijani: möhür (az)
Belarusian: пяча́ць f ( pjačácʹ ) , пяча́тка f ( pjačátka )
Bhojpuri: मोहर ( mōhar )
Bulgarian: печа́т (bg) f ( pečát )
Burmese: တံဆိပ်တုံး (my) ( tamhciptum: )
Chinese:
Mandarin: 印章 (zh) ( yìnzhāng ) , 圖章 / 图章 (zh) ( túzhāng )
Czech: pečeť (cs) f
Danish: segl (da) n
Dutch: zegel (nl) m or n
Esperanto: sigelo
Finnish: leimasin (fi) , sinetti (fi)
French: sceau (fr) m
Galician: selo m
German: Stempel (de) m , Siegel (de) m
Greek: βούλα (el) f ( voúla ) , σφραγίδα (el) f ( sfragída )
Ancient: σφραγίς f ( sphragís )
Guaraní: jopyha
Hebrew: חוֹתָם (he) n ( khotám )
Hindi: मोहर (hi) ( mohar ) , मुद्रा (hi) ( mudrā ) , छाप (hi) ( chāp ) , छापा (hi) ( chāpā )
Hungarian: pecsét (hu) , pecsétnyomó (hu)
Icelandic: innsigli (is) n
Ingrian: pätsetti
Japanese: 印章 (ja) ( いんしょう, inshō )
Korean: 인장(印章) (ko) ( injang )
Latin: sigillum n
Macedonian: печат f ( pečat )
Malay: cap (ms)
Manchu: ᡩᠣᡵᠣᠨ ( doron )
Nanai: дорон ( doron )
Norwegian:
Bokmål: segl (no) n
Nynorsk: segl n
Occitan: sagèl (oc) m
Ottoman Turkish: خاتم ( hatem ) , مهر ( mühür )
Persian: مهر (fa) ( mohr )
Plautdietsch: Säajel n
Polish: pieczęć (pl) f
Portuguese: selo (pt) m
Romanian: pecete (ro) f
Russian: печа́ть (ru) f ( pečátʹ )
Serbo-Croatian:
Cyrillic: пѐчат m
Roman: pèčat (sh) m
Slovak: pečať f
Slovene: pečat (sl) f
Spanish: sello (es)
Swedish: sigill (sv) n
Tausug: sap
Turkish: mühür (tr)
Ukrainian: печа́тка f ( pečátka ) , печа́ть f ( pečátʹ )
Uyghur: مۆھۈر ( möhür )
Venetan: boło
Vietnamese: con dấu , ấn (vi) , triện (vi)
design or insignia associated with organization or official role
Arabic: خَتْم m ( ḵatm )
Armenian: կնիք (hy) ( knikʻ )
Asturian: sellu m
Belarusian: пяча́ць f ( pjačácʹ ) , пяча́тка f ( pjačátka )
Bulgarian: печа́т (bg) m ( pečát )
Catalan: segell (ca) m
Chinese:
Mandarin: 印章 (zh) ( yìnzhāng )
Czech: pečeť (cs) f
Dutch: zegel (nl) m or n
Esperanto: sigelo
Finnish: vaakuna (fi) , tunnus (fi)
French: sceau (fr) m
Friulian: sugel m
Galician: selo m
Georgian: ბეჭედი (ka) ( beč̣edi )
German: Siegel (de) n , Petschaft (de) n
Greek: σφραγίδα (el) f ( sfragída )
Guaraní: jopyha
Hungarian: pecsét (hu)
Icelandic: innsigli (is) n
Indonesian: lambang (id)
Italian: sigillo (it) m , bollo (it) m , timbro (it) m
Japanese: 判 (ja) ( はん, han ) , 印章 (ja) ( いんしょう, inshō ) , 璽 (ja) ( じ, ji ) , 封印 (ja) ( ふういん, fūin )
Korean: 도장(圖章) (ko) ( dojang )
Latin: sigillum m
Norwegian:
Bokmål: segl (no) n
Nynorsk: segl n
Occitan: sagèl (oc) m
Persian: مهر (fa) ( mohr )
Plautdietsch: Säajel n
Polish: pieczęć (pl) f
Portuguese: selo (pt) m , timbre (pt) m , sinete (pt) m
Romanian: sigiliu (ro) n
Russian: печа́ть (ru) f ( pečátʹ )
Scottish Gaelic: seula m
Serbo-Croatian:
Cyrillic: пѐчат m
Roman: pèčat (sh) m
Slovene: pečat (sl) m
Spanish: sello (es) m
Swedish: sigill (sv) n
Ukrainian: печа́тка f ( pečátka ) , печа́ть f ( pečátʹ )
Uyghur: پېچەت ( pëchet )
Venetan: boło , tinbro
anything that secures or authenticates
something which will be visibly damaged when a covering or container is opened
something designed to prevent leaking
Arabic: please add this translation if you can
Bulgarian: уплътня́ване n ( uplǎtnjávane ) , изола́ция (bg) f ( izolácija )
Chinese:
Mandarin: please add this translation if you can
Esperanto: please add this translation if you can
Finnish: tiiviste (fi)
French: please add this translation if you can
German: Dichtung (de) f
Greek: σφράγισμα (el) n ( sfrágisma )
Hebrew: אטם (he) m ( étem ) , ציפוי מסתם m ( tsipúy mesatém ) , אטימה f ( atimá )
Hungarian: tömítés (hu) , szigetelés (hu)
Indonesian: tutup (id)
Italian: guarnizione (it) f
Japanese: please add this translation if you can
Norwegian: forsegling m
Polish: uszczelka f
Portuguese: vedação (pt) f
Romanian: please add this translation if you can
Russian: уплотни́тель (ru) m ( uplotnítelʹ ) , са́льник (ru) m ( sálʹnik ) , прокла́дка (ru) f ( prokládka )
Slovak: tesnenie n
Spanish: empaque (es) m , cierre (es) m , zapatilla (es) f , junta (es) f , empaquetadura f
Thai: please add this translation if you can
Venetan: guarnision
Vietnamese: cái bịt
tight closure
Bulgarian: затво́р (bg) m ( zatvór ) , обтура́тор m ( obturátor )
Dutch: sluiting (nl) f
Estonian: tihend
Finnish: tiiviys (fi)
French: joint (fr) ?
German: Siegel (de) ? , Dichtung (de) f
Greek: σφράγισμα (el) n ( sfrágisma ) , στεγανοποίηση (el) f ( steganopoíisi )
Indonesian: segel (id)
Italian: sigillo (it) m
Japanese: 封 (ja) ( ふう, fū ) , 封印 (ja) ( ふういん, fūin ) , 封緘 (ja) ( ふうかん, fūkan )
Norwegian: segl (no) n
Polish: uszczelnienie n
Portuguese: vedação (pt) f
Russian: уплотне́ние (ru) n ( uplotnénije ) , герметиза́ция (ru) f ( germetizácija )
Spanish: sello (es) m , sellador (es) m
Swedish: sigill (sv) ?
Venetan: boło
Verb
seal (third-person singular simple present seals , present participle sealing , simple past and past participle sealed )
( transitive ) To place a seal on (a document).
To mark with a stamp, as an evidence of standard exactness, legal size, or merchantable quality.
to seal weights and measures
to seal silverware
( transitive ) To fasten (something) so that it cannot be opened without visible damage .
The cover is sealed . If anyone tries to open it, we'll know about it.
( transitive ) To prevent people or vehicles from crossing (something).
Synonyms: block , block off , close , close off , obstruct , seal off
The border has been sealed until the fugitives are found.
( transitive ) To close securely to prevent leakage .
I've sealed the bottle to keep the contents fresh.
1591 (date written), William Shakespeare , “The Second Part of Henry the Sixt, ”, in Mr. William Shakespeares Comedies, Histories, & Tragedies. (First Folio ), London: Isaac Iaggard , and Ed Blount , published 1623 , →OCLC , :Seal up your lips, and give no words but "mum".
( transitive ) To place in a sealed container.
Synonym: enclose
I've sealed the documents in this envelope.
( transitive , chess ) To place a notation of one's next move in a sealed envelope to be opened after an adjournment .
After thinking for half an hour, the champion sealed his move.
( transitive ) To guarantee .
The last-minute goal sealed United’s win.
seal one's destiny
seal someone's fate
seal the job
2018 June 18, Phil McNulty , “Tunisia 1 – 2 England ”, in BBC Sport , archived from the original on 21 April 2019 :England's first-half display contained much to admire but it was a sign of their wastefulness in front of goal that it took the injury-time intervention from Kane to seal victory.
To fix, as a piece of iron in a wall, with cement or plaster , etc.
1898 , The American Archaeologist , page 267 :Sealed to this wall by their rims were cazuelas ( earthenware bowls).
1971 , Environmental Conservation, the Oil and Gas Industries , page 127 :After testing is concluded and it has been determined that the drilled well is to be completed as a producing or fluid-injection well, or that operations are to be suspended, the final string of casing is placed in the well and sealed to the penetrated formation with cement.
1974 , Ruins Stabilization in the Southwestern United States , page 40 :The PVC was then sealed to the plastered foundation with a 3-inch-wide band of PVC-to-concrete adhesive applied above the Thiokol.
1974 , Egyptian Journal of Physics - Volumes 5-6 , page 2:The blowing device consists of a glass vessel with a hollow perforated cylinder sealed to its base, and two side tubes sealed at opposite ends of the vessel.
To close by means of a seal.
to seal a drainpipe with water
2008 , Sandra Davison, R.G. Newton, Conservation and Restoration of Glass , page 301 :When the silicone rubber has set the plaster pieces are replaced, followed by the lid, which is sealed to the mother-mould with plaster and bandage as previously described.
( Mormonism ) To bind eternally as family members.
2010 , Christopher Kimball Bigelow, Jonathan Langford, The Latter-day Saint Family Encyclopedia , page 306 :In temples of God, families are eternally sealed through this power. Couples who enter into the Covenant of Eternal Marriage are sealed together, meaning that their union on earth is also valid in the heavens, rather than ending at death. Children who are subsequently born to them or later sealed to them are theirs for eternity… In addition, temple sealings are performed by proxy for the dead, with spouses sealed to each other and children sealed to parents.
1852 , Howard Stansbury, An Expedition to the Valley of the Great Salt Lake of Utah :If a man once married desires a second helpmate [ …] she is sealed to him under the solemn sanction of the church.
1870 , Aaron Harrison Cragin, Execution of Laws in Utah , page 9:She can be sealed to this other man and still remain with her first husband; and the Mormons believe that all her children will belong to the man to whom she is sealed .
2001 , Richard W. Slatta, The Mythical West , page 197 :Next, I was sealed to my fourteenth wife, Emeline Vaughn. In 1851, I was sealed to my fifteenth wife, Mary Lear Groves. In 1856, I was sealed to my sixteenth wife, Mary Ann Williams.
( Christianity ) To form a sacred commitment .
1836 , John Flavel, The Fountain of Life Opened; Or, A Display of Christ in His Essential and Mediatorial Glory. 1671 , page 44 :What was that office, or work, to which his Father sealed him? I answer, more generally, he was sealed to the whole work of mediation for us, thereby to recover and save all the elect, whom the Father had given him:
1861 , Joanna Southcott, Lavinia Elizabeth C. Jones, The scriptures of the holy Trinity , page 88 :Perfectly so, I tell thee, of the sealed people who have come in through unbelief, pretending themselves to be children of the kingdom, that they are sealed to be heirs of the promise, but have come in as thieves and robbers.
1866 , Paul Baynes, An Entire Commentary Upon the Whole Epistle of St. Paul to the Ephesians , page 81 :Let us all strive to get ourselves sealed to redemption, seeing God doth seal those whom he will deliver in that great day; if we be not in this number, we shall not escape damnation.
2015 , Uchenna Mezue, Hidden In Plain Sight: A Study of the Revelation to John :Thus these representatives of humanity are first sealed to help with the final work of salvation.
( cooking , transitive ) To fry (meat) at a high temperature to retain the juices.
1993 , Daran Little, Life and Times at the Rovers Return , page 113 :Seal the meat and continue frying until nicely browned.
Derived terms
Translations
to place a seal on (a document)
to fasten (something) closed so that it cannot be opened without visible damage
to prevent people or vehicles from crossing (something)
to close securely
Bulgarian: запечатвам (bg) ( zapečatvam )
Finnish: tiivistää (fi)
French: cacheter (fr)
German: abdichten (de) , dichten (de) , versiegeln (de)
Hungarian: lezár (hu) , bezár (hu) , leszigetel (hu) , szigetel (hu) , tömít (hu) , vízhatlanná tesz , elzár (hu) , leplombál (hu) , beragaszt (hu)
Italian: chiudere ermeticamente
Portuguese: vedar (pt)
Russian: запеча́тывать (ru) ( zapečátyvatʹ )
Slovene: zatesniti
Spanish: sellar (es) , hermetizar (es) , precintar (es)
to place in a sealed container
chess: to place a notation of one's next move in a sealed envelope
See also
Further reading
Etymology 3
From Middle English *selen (suggested by Middle English sele ( “ harness; hame ” ) ), perhaps from Old English sǣlan ( “ to bind ” ) .
Verb
seal (third-person singular simple present seals , present participle sealing , simple past and past participle sealed )
( dialectal ) To tie up animals (especially cattle) in their stalls.
Anagrams
ASLE , Ales , ELAS , Elsa , LAEs , LEAs , Sale , Salé , Sela , aels , ales , lase , leas , sale , sela
Estonian
Etymology 1
Superessive of see ( “ this, it ” ) . Akin to Finnish siellä and Ingrian seel .
Adverb
seal (not comparable )
there ( indicating location : in or at that place)
See also
Etymology 2
See the etymology of the corresponding lemma form.
Noun
seal
adessive singular of siga ( “ pig ” )
Irish
Etymology
From Old Irish sel ,[ 1] from Proto-Celtic *swelos ( “ turn ” ) , possibly ultimately from Proto-Indo-European *welH- ( “ to turn ” ) .
Pronunciation
Noun
seal m (genitive singular seala , nominative plural sealanna )
turn ( chance to use (something) shared in sequence with others )
spell , span ( period of time )
Declension
Mutation
Note: Certain mutated forms of some words can never occur in standard Modern Irish. All possible mutated forms are displayed for convenience.
References
Further reading
“seal ”, in Historical Irish Corpus, 1600–1926 , Royal Irish Academy
Dinneen, Patrick S. (1904 ) “seal”, in Foclóir Gaeḋilge agus Béarla , 1st edition, Dublin: Irish Texts Society, page 625
Ó Dónaill, Niall (1977 ) “seal ”, in Foclóir Gaeilge–Béarla , Dublin: An Gúm, →ISBN
West Frisian
Etymology 1
From Old Frisian sāl , from Proto-West Germanic *sadul .
Noun
seal n (plural sealen , diminutive sealtsje )
saddle
Further reading
“seal (II) ”, in Wurdboek fan de Fryske taal (in Dutch), 2011
Etymology 2
From Old Frisian *sele , from Proto-West Germanic *sali .
Noun
seal c or n (plural sealen , diminutive sealtsje )
hall
Further reading
“seal (I) ”, in Wurdboek fan de Fryske taal (in Dutch), 2011