Partly from Middle English tas (“heap”), from Old French tas (“heap”), from Frankish *tas (“mass, pile”); and partly from Middle English taas (“heap, mow of corn”), from Old English tas (“heap, mow of grain”); both from Proto-Germanic *tasaz, *tassaz (“heap, mow, stack”), from Proto-Indo-European *deh₂y- (“to divide, split, section, part, separate”). Related to Middle Dutch tas, tasse (“heap, pile”, Dutch tas), Middle Low German tas (“mow of hay or wheat”), Gothic 𐌿𐌽𐌲𐌰𐍄𐌰𐍃𐍃 (ungatass, “disorganised, irregular”); and possibly also to Old High German zetten (“to straw, fertilise”), Old Norse tað (“spread dung”). See tath.
tass (plural tasses)
From Middle English *tasse, from Old French tasse (Modern French tasse (“cup, cupful”)). Cognate with Dutch tas (“cup”), German Tasse (“mug”). Doublet of tazza.
tass (plural tasses)
From Middle English tasse, tache, from Old French tasse, tasche (“purse; pouch”), from Frankish *taskā (“pouch”), from Proto-Germanic *taskǭ, cognate with Old High German tasca (“pouch”), German Tasche (“pocket; pouch”).
tass (plural tasses)
From Hindi .
tass
Borrowed from German Tasse.[1]
tass (genitive tassi, partitive tassi)
Declension of tass (ÕS type 22e/riik, length gradation) | |||
---|---|---|---|
singular | plural | ||
nominative | tass | tassid | |
accusative | nom. | ||
gen. | tassi | ||
genitive | tasside | ||
partitive | tassi | tasse tassisid | |
illative | tassi tassisse |
tassidesse tassesse | |
inessive | tassis | tassides tasses | |
elative | tassist | tassidest tassest | |
allative | tassile | tassidele tassele | |
adessive | tassil | tassidel tassel | |
ablative | tassilt | tassidelt tasselt | |
translative | tassiks | tassideks tasseks | |
terminative | tassini | tassideni | |
essive | tassina | tassidena | |
abessive | tassita | tassideta | |
comitative | tassiga | tassidega |
Unknown. Possibly ultimately from Ancient Greek ταρσός (tarsós, “flat of the foot, ankle, palm of the hand”) (probably through Latin tarsus by way of German Tarsus or French tarse; compare English tarsal). Perhaps the meaning extended from "flat surface of the foot or palm" to "paw of an animal."[1]
Compare the verb tassa (“to walk quietly”), which could either be a formation from tass or otherwise imitative. Also compare German Tatze (“paw”).
tass c
For a larger paw, like on a bear, other words are labb and ram.
nominative | genitive | ||
---|---|---|---|
singular | indefinite | tass | tass |
definite | tassen | tassens | |
plural | indefinite | tassar | tassars |
definite | tassarna | tassarnas |