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in singular and plural. Everything you need to know about the word
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Translingual
Symbol
tay
- (international standards) ISO 639-3 language code for Atayal.
See also
English
Etymology
Spelling form indicating original pronunciation of tea. The digraph ea represented /eː/ in Early Modern English; it later merged chiefly with ee, but regionally or sporadically with ay (in standard English break, great, steak). Compare the song Polly put the kettle on, where tea rhymes with away.
Pronunciation
Noun
tay (plural tays)
- (obsolete or dialect) Tea.
1856 October 18, The People's Advocate and New South Wales Vindicator, Sydney, page 6, column 1:"[T]hen the Tulip, - ah! didn't the Tulip die hard, - he fout hard for it, even after he had a hole in his head as big as a tay cup."
1930, Norman Lindsay, Redheap, Sydney, N.S.W.: Ure Smith, published 1965, →OCLC, page 207:"There's your tay set for you an' drawin' nicely this minute, Miss Ethel," called old Bridget from the hall.
Anagrams
Azerbaijani
Pronunciation
Etymology 1
Ultimately from Middle Chinese 袋 (dʌiH).
Noun
tay (definite accusative tayı, plural taylar)
- sack (usually used for grains or potatoes)
- bag
- counter for bags of grain or potato
Declension
Synonyms
Etymology 2
Ultimately from Middle Chinese 對 (tuʌiH).
Noun
tay (definite accusative tayı, plural taylar)
- something equal to another thing
Bu qızın tayı yoxdur.- This girl doesn't have any equal.
- pair
eşşək anqırar tayını tapar (folk idiom)- donkey brays and finds its pair
- one side of something; especially bank (of a river etc.)
1941, Əhliman Axundov, Qaçaq Nəbi:Arazın o tayı da, bu tayı da, mənim doğma el obamdır- Both this side and that side of Aras river is my homeland.
Declension
Synonyms
Kalasha
Etymology
From Sanskrit त्वम् (tvam).
Determiner
tay
- your (singular)
Coordinate terms
Kwaza
Noun
tay
- woman
References
- Hein van der Voort, A Grammar of Kwaza
Middle English
Etymology 1
From Middle French taye, and its source, Latin tēca, thēca, from Ancient Greek θήκη (thḗkē, “covering, sheath”).
Noun
tay (plural tays)
- The outer membrane of the brain.
1470–1485 (date produced), Thomas Malory, “Capitulum 4”, in [Le Morte Darthur], book XXI, by
William Caxton], published
31 July 1485,
→OCLC; republished as H
Oskar Sommer, editor,
Le Morte Darthur , London:
David Nutt,
,
1889,
→OCLC:
ryght so he smote hys fadir, Kynge Arthure, with hys swerde holdynge in both hys hondys, uppon the syde of the hede, that the swerde perced the helmet and the tay of the brayne.- (please add an English translation of this quotation)
References
Etymology 2
Pronoun
tay
- Alternative form of þei
Paipai
Adjective
tay
- big
Pipil
Etymology
From Proto-Nahuan *tla-. Compare Classical Nahuatl tlein (“what”).
Pronunciation
Pronoun
tay
- (interroɡative) what
- Tay tikwaj yalua?
- What did you eat yesterday?
- (relative) what; that which; the thing that
- Tesu nikmati ne tay inak
- I don't know what she/he said
Turkish
Etymology
From Old Anatolian Turkish (tay), from Proto-Turkic . Cognate with Kazakh тай (tai), Chuvash тиха (tih̬a), тӑйха (tăjh̬a), Azerbaijani dayça.
Pronunciation
Noun
tay (definite accusative tayı, plural taylar)
- colt (horse)
Vietnamese
Etymology
From Proto-Vietic *siː. Cognate with Tho siː¹, Thavung ซี.
The relationship between this root and the root represented by Khmer ដៃ (day), Bahnar ti, Juang iti is uncertain. Sora siˀi is likely a post-Proto-Munda development, as other Munda reflexes show /t/.
The "Northern" Austroasiatic branches (Khmuic, Palaungic, Khasian) occasionally show forms with a fricative, affricate, or palatal stop that correspond to *t in the non-Northern branches. Vietic, as a non-"Northern" branch, shows alveolar stop (cf. Khmu caŋ vs. Vietnamese đắng (“bitter”), Mal sam vs. Vietnamese đăm (“right”), possibly Khmu psɨəm vs. Vietnamese đêm (“night”)). Yet here, the "Northern" branches all show /t/ (Khmu tiʔ, Parauk taix, Khasi kti), but Vietic languages uniformly point to *s.
Pronunciation
Noun
tay • (𢬣, 𪮏, 拪, 揌)
- (colloquial) a hand
- quẹo bên tay phải ― to turn right (to the right-hand side)
- (colloquial) an arm
- tay áo ― a sleeve
- (informal) a guy; a dude
Tay này không phải vừa đâu!- He’s not the type to be trifled with!
Derived terms