tave

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See also: tavë, täve, Tâve, Tåve, and ťave

English

Etymology

From Middle English taven, from Old Norse *tafa, from Proto-Germanic *tabōn (to grope, feel). Cognate with Faroese tava (to endeavour, exert oneself), Norwegian Nynorsk tava (to toil in vain), German zabeln (to move convulsively, sprawl, flounder).

Verb

tave (third-person singular simple present taves, present participle taving, simple past and past participle taved)

  1. (intransitive) To sprawl with the arms and legs; kick or fidget with the feet.
  2. (intransitive) To toss or tumble oneself about; act violently, rage, throw a fit.
  3. (intransitive) To struggle, toil, strive, labour.
  4. (intransitive) To trudge, walk heavily.
  5. (transitive, intransitive) To wrestle.
  6. (intransitive, dialectal) To hurry along; gad about.
  7. (transitive, dialectal) To distress, overtire.

Noun

tave (plural taves)

  1. (dialectal) A difficulty, struggle.
  2. (dialectal) A hurry, stir, commotion.

Catalan

Noun

tave m (plural taves)

  1. Alternative form of tàvec

Cypriot Arabic

Root
t-v-v
1 term

Etymology

From Arabic تَوّ (taww).

Adjective

tave

  1. (of time) exact, specific

References

  • Borg, Alexander (2004) A Comparative Glossary of Cypriot Maronite Arabic (Arabic–English) (Handbook of Oriental Studies; I.70), Leiden and Boston: Brill, page 176

Lithuanian

Pronunciation

Pronoun

tavè

  1. second-person singular accusative of tu