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te

From Wiktionary, the free dictionary

Translingual

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Etymology

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Clipping of English Telugu or Telugu తెలుగు (telugu).

Symbol

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te

  1. (international standards) ISO 639-1 language code for Telugu.

See also

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English

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English Wikipedia has an article on:
Wikipedia

Etymology 1

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Sense 1: Altered from si in the 19th century to prevent having two notes of the musical scale starting with the same letter, to become te and later ti.

Sense 2: The vowel of ti then changed to 'e' to signify a flattened note.

Pronunciation

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Noun

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te (plural tes)

  1. (music, obsolete) In solfège, the seventh note of a major scale (the note B in the fixed-do system): ti.
    Synonym: si
  2. (music) In solfège, the lowered seventh note of a major scale (the note B-flat in the fixed-do system): ta.
    Synonyms: ta, B-flat, li

Etymology 2

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Noun

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te (plural tes)

  1. The name of the Cyrillic script letter Т / т.

Anagrams

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Afrikaans

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Etymology

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From Dutch te.

Pronunciation

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Adverb

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te

  1. indicating excess: too

Preposition

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te

  1. modifying an infinitive verb: to
  2. located at, in

Äiwoo

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Verb

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te

  1. to see

References

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Akan

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Alternative forms

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Pronunciation

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Verb

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te

  1. to understand, perceive
  2. to hear

References

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  1. ^ Kotey, Paul A. (1998), Twi-English/English-Twi Dictionary[1], New York: Hippocrene Books, →ISBN

Albanian

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Alternative forms

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  • keGheg dialects

Etymology

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From Proto-Albanian *te-k(u), from Proto-Indo-European *to- (it). Governs the nominative determinative, due to its relatively recent use as a preposition and its origin as a shortened form of Albanian *te-k(u).

Preposition

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te (+ nominative)

  1. at
    Unë jam te pijetorja.
    I'm at the bar.
  2. to
  3. (with a human referent) at (someone's) place
    Jemi te unë.
    We're at my place.

Synonyms

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Aragonese

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Etymology

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From Latin te. Akin to Spanish te and French te.

Pronoun

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te

  1. Second-person singular dative, accusative and prepositional pronoun; you

Usage notes

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  • Takes the form t' before verbs beginning with vowel sounds.

See also

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Aragonese personal pronouns
nominative disjunctive dative accusative
first person singular yo me, m'2
plural masculine nusatros1.1 nos1.6
feminine nusatras1.1
second person singular familiar te, t'2
formal vusté,1.2 vos
plural familiar masculine vusatros1.3 vos, tos3
feminine vusatras1.3
formal vustés,1.2 vos
third person singular masculine él1.4 le1.7 lo,1.8 l'2
feminine ella1.5 la
plural masculine els, ellos1.4 les1.7 los1.9
feminine ellas1.5 las
reflexive se, s'2
  1. The forms shown in the table are the most widespread ones. Some varieties use different forms:
    1. nusotros/as (Ansotano, Cheso, Somontanos) and nusaltros/as (Benasquese and Belsetán).
    2. usté(s) (Benasquese), ustet(z) (Ansotano), vustet(z) (Tensino, Somontanos)
    3. vusotros/as (Ansotano, Cheso, Somontanos) and vusaltros/as (Benasquese and Belsetán).
    4. ell(s) (Benasquese) and er(s) (Belsetán).
    5. era(s) (Belsetán).
    6. mos (Ribagorçan). Before third-person pronouns and the adverbial pronoun en the contracted form mo' is used.
    7. li(s) (Cheso, Tensino).
    8. el (Ribagorçan). The contracted form l' is used before verbs beginning with vowel sounds and 'l after pronouns ending in vowels and no (no, not).
    9. es, els (Ribagorçan). These forms are contracted to 's and 'ls after pronouns ending in vowels and no (no, not).
  2. The contracted forms are used before verbs beginning with vowel sounds.
  3. In Ribagorçan the contracted form to' is used before third-person pronouns and the adverbial pronoun en.
This entry is still in development.

References

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  • te”, in Aragonario, diccionario castellano–aragonés (in Spanish)

Asturian

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Etymology

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From Latin , from .

Pronoun

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te

  1. you (second-person singular direct pronoun)
  2. you (second-person singular indirect pronoun)

Bangi

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Adverb

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te

  1. no

Basque

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Pronunciation

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Etymology 1

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Noun

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te inan

  1. tea


Etymology 2

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Noun

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te inan

  1. The name of the Latin-script letter T/t.
Declension
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Declension of te (inan V-stem)
indefinite singular plural proximal plural
absolutive te tea teak teok
ergative tek teak teek teok
dative teri teari teei teoi
genitive teren tearen teen teon
comitative terekin tearekin teekin teokin
causative terengatik tearengatik teengatik teongatik
benefactive terentzat tearentzat teentzat teontzat
instrumental tez teaz teez teotaz
innesive tetan tean teetan teotan
locative tetako teko teetako teotako
allative tetara tera teetara teotara
terminative tetaraino teraino teetaraino teotaraino
directive tetarantz terantz teetarantz teotarantz
destinative tetarako terako teetarako teotarako
ablative tetatik tetik teetatik teotatik
partitive terik
prolative tetzat
See also
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Blagar

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Noun

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te

  1. wood, tree

References

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Breton

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Etymology

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From Proto-Brythonic *ti, from Proto-Celtic *tū, from Proto-Indo-European *túh₂. Cognate to Welsh ti.

Pronoun

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te

  1. you (singular)

See also

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Breton personal pronouns
singular plural
1st person me ni
2nd person te c’hwi
3rd person m int
f hi

Catalan

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Etymology 1

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(This etymology is missing or incomplete. Please add to it, or discuss it at the Etymology scriptorium.)

Pronunciation

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Noun

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te f (plural tes)

  1. The name of the Latin-script letter T/t.

Etymology 2

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From Latin (accusative of ).

Pronunciation

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Pronoun

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te (enclitic, contracted 't, proclitic et, contracted proclitic t')

  1. you, thee (direct or indirect object)
  2. yourself (reflexive pronoun)
Usage notes
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  • -te is the full (plena) form of the pronoun. It is normally used after verbs ending with a consonant or ⟨u⟩, or between some adverbs/pronouns and a verb. In some varieties of Catalan (Balearic/Valencian) it can also occur in sentence-initial position.
    Puc ajudar-te?Can I help you?
    Mou-te!Move!
Declension
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Catalan personal pronouns and clitics
strong/subject weak (direct object) weak (indirect object) possessive
proclitic enclitic proclitic enclitic
singular 1st
person
standard jo, mi3 em, m’ -me, ’m em, m’ -me, ’m meu
majestic1 nós ens -nos, ’ns ens -nos, ’ns nostre
2nd
person
standard tu et, t’ -te, ’t et, t’ -te, ’t teu
formal1 vós us -vos, -us us -vos, -us vostre
very formal2 vostè el, l’ -lo, ’l li -li seu
3rd
person
m ell el, l’ -lo, ’l li -li seu
f ella la, l’4 -la li -li seu
n ho -ho li -li seu
plural
1st person nosaltres ens -nos, ’ns ens -nos, ’ns nostre
2nd
person
standard vosaltres us -vos, -us us -vos, -us vostre
formal2 vostès els -los, ’ls els -los, ’ls seu
3rd
person
m ells els -los, ’ls els -los, ’ls seu
f elles les -les els -los, ’ls seu
3rd person reflexive si es, s’ -se, ’s es, s’ -se, ’s seu
adverbial ablative/genitive en, n’ -ne, ’n
locative hi -hi

1 Behaves grammatically as plural.   2 Behaves grammatically as third person.
3 Only as object of a preposition.   4 Not before unstressed (h)i-, (h)u-.

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Etymology 3

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Originally from Hokkien ().

Pronunciation

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Noun

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te m (plural tes)

  1. a tea plant (Camellia sinensis)
  2. tea; the product made from the leaves of the tea plant
  3. tea; a light afternoon meal at which tea is commonly served
Derived terms
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Further reading

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Classical Nahuatl

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Pronoun

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te

  1. alternative spelling of teh

Coatepec Nahuatl

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Noun

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te

  1. stone

Cornish

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Pronunciation

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Etymology 1

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    From English tea, from Dutch thee.

    Noun

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    te m (plural teow)

    1. tea
    Derived terms
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    Etymology 2

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      From Proto-Brythonic *ti, from Proto-Celtic *tū, from Proto-Indo-European *túh₂.

      Alternative forms

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      Pronoun

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      te

      1. (Standard Cornish) alternative form of ty; you (informal second person singular pronoun), thou, thee

      Mutation

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      Mutation of te
      unmutated soft aspirate hard mixed mixed after 'th
      te de the unchanged unchanged unchanged

      Note: Certain mutated forms of some words can never occur in standard Cornish.
      All possible mutated forms are displayed for convenience.

      Czech

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      Pronunciation

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      Verb

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      te

      1. (informal) Combined form of to +‎ je

      See also

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      Dalmatian

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      Etymology

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      From Latin .

      Pronoun

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      te

      1. (second-person singular pronoun) you, thou
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      See also

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      Danish

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      Pronunciation

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      • IPA(key): /ˈteːˀ/, [ˈtˢe̝ːˀ], [ˈtsʰe̝ˀ]

      Etymology 1

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      Borrowed from Dutch thee, from Hokkien (, tea), compare English tea, German Tee, French thé.

      Alternative forms

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      • the (unofficial since 1872, but still common)

      Noun

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      te c (singular definite teen, plural indefinite teer)

      1. tea (plant) (Camellia sinensis)
      2. tea (the dried leaves from the tea plant, also parts from other plants)
      3. (uncountable) tea (a beverage made from tea leaves, also similar beverages made from other plants)
      Declension
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      Declension of te
      common
      gender
      singular plural
      indefinite definite indefinite definite
      nominative te teen teer teerne
      genitive tes teens teers teernes
      Derived terms
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      Descendants
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      • Faroese: te
      References
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      Etymology 2

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      From Old Norse tjá, from Proto-Germanic *tīhaną (to show), cognate with Icelandic tjá, Faroese tíggja, Swedish te, German zeihen (to accuse). The verb goes back to Proto-Indo-European *deyḱ- (to show), which is also the source of Latin dīcō (to say), Ancient Greek δείκνυμι (deíknumi, to show).

      Verb

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      te (present tense ter, past tense teede, past participle teet)

      1. (reflexive) behave
      Conjugation
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      Conjugation of te
      active passive
      present ter
      past teede
      infinitive te
      imperative te
      participle
      present teende
      past teet
      (auxiliary verb have)
      gerund teen
      Derived terms
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      References
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      Deg Xinag

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      Etymology

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      From Proto-Athabaskan *tuˑ.

      Pronunciation

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      Noun

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      te

      1. water

      References

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      Dutch

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      Etymology

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      From Middle Dutch te, from Old Dutch te, ti, from Proto-Germanic *ta.

      Pronunciation

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      Adverb

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      te

      1. too (indicating excess)
        Te veel is nooit goed!Too much is never good!
        Te gek!Far out! (literally, “Too crazy!”)

      Derived terms

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      Descendants

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      Preposition

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      te

      1. (modifying an infinitive verb) to
        Er is iets te etenthere is something to eat
        Het is te doenit is doable, it can be done
      2. located at, in, on
        Te Amsterdamin Amsterdam.
        En zo rijden we te paardand so we ride on horseback.

      Usage notes

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      This preposition used to govern the dative case. It also fused with the dative forms of the definite article:

      • (at, in): ter = te + der for feminine singular.
      • (at, in): ten = te + den in all other cases.

      Combinations with the nominative form of the article, like *te het or *te de have never become part of the language. The collapse of the inflection system and the related demise of the distinction between masculine and feminine gender (for most speakers) has pushed this preposition into partial disuse. It does however occur in a fair number of idiomatic expressions, often with fossilized case endings, e.g.:

      te elfder ure.at the eleventh hour
      te eigen batefor one's own profit

      (Elfder, ure and bate are dative forms of elfde, uur and baat respectively.)

      Derived terms

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      Descendants

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      • Jersey Dutch: te
      • Negerhollands: toe

      Article

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      te

      1. (archaic) in idiom; a form of the definite article de
        Te drommel
        by Jove.

      Estonian

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      Etymology

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      From Proto-Finnic *tek.

      Pronoun

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      te (short form of teie)

      1. you (plural and polite form)

      Declension

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      Declension of te
      2nd person singular plural
      long short long short
      nominative sina sa teie te
      genitive sinu su teie te
      partitive sind teid
      illative sinusse susse teisse
      inessive sinus sus teis
      elative sinust sust teist
      allative sinule sulle teile
      adessive sinul sul teil
      ablative sinult sult teilt
      translative sinuks teieks teiks
      terminative sinuni teieni
      essive sinuna teiena
      abessive sinuta teieta
      comitative sinuga suga teiega

      See also

      [edit]
      Estonian personal pronouns
      singular plural
      long short long short
      1st person mina ma meie me
      2nd person familiar sina sa teie te
      polite Teie Te
      3rd person animate tema ta nemad nad
      inanimate see need

      Ewe

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      Noun

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      te

      1. paternal aunt
      2. yam

      Preposition

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      te

      1. under

      Verb

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      te

      1. to compact
      2. to compress
      3. to sting
      4. to swell

      Fala

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      Etymology

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      From Old Galician-Portuguese te, from Latin .

      Pronoun

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      te

      1. Second person singular dative and accusative pronoun; you

      Usage notes

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      • Takes the form -ti when suffixed to an impersonal verb form.

      See also

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      Fala personal pronouns
      nominative dative accusative disjunctive
      singular first person ei me, -mi mi
      second person te, -ti ti
      third
      person
      m el le, -li uLV, oM el
      f ela a ela
      plural first
      person
      common nos musL
      nusLV
      nos, -nusM
      nos
      m noshotrusM noshotrusM
      f noshotrasM noshotrasM
      second
      person
      common vos vusLV
      vos, -vusM
      vos
      m voshotrusM voshotrusM
      f voshotrasM voshotrasM
      third
      person
      m elis le, -li usLV, osM elis
      f elas as elas
      third person reflexive se, -si

      Dialects:  L Lagarteiru   M Mañegu   V Valverdeñu

      References

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      • Valeš, Miroslav (2021), Diccionariu de A Fala: lagarteiru, mañegu, valverdeñu (web)[4], 2nd edition, Minde, Portugal: CIDLeS, published 2022, →ISBN, page 265

      Faroese

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      Pronunciation

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      Etymology 1

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      Noun

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      te n (genitive singular tes, plural te)

      1. The name of the Latin-script letter T/t.
      Declension
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      n4 singular plural
      indefinite definite indefinite definite
      nominative te teið te teini
      accusative te teið te teini
      dative te, tei tenum teum teunum
      genitive tes tesins tea teanna
      See also
      [edit]

      Etymology 2

      [edit]

      Originally from Hokkien (), from Middle Chinese, from Old Chinese, ultimately from Proto-Sino-Tibetan *s-la (leaf, tea).

      Noun

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      te n (genitive singular tes, uncountable)

      1. tea
      Declension
      [edit]
      n4s singular
      indefinite definite
      nominative te teið
      accusative te teið
      dative te, tei tenum
      genitive tes tesins
      Derived terms
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      Anagrams

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      Finnish

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      Alternative forms

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      • Te (when used politely)

      Etymology

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      From Proto-Finnic *tek, from Proto-Uralic *te. The word is inflected as plural, but there is no plural marker in the nominative, except in dialects (tet).

      Pronunciation

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      • IPA(key): /ˈte/, [ˈt̪e̞]
      • Audio:(file)
      • Audio:(file)
      • Rhymes: -e
      • Syllabification(key): te
      • Hyphenation(key): te

      Pronoun

      [edit]

      te

      1. (personal) you (second-person plural; when addressing many persons or when addressing politely or formally one person)

      Usage notes

      [edit]
      • Depending on the context, the pronoun can sometimes be omitted in written language if the text remains fluent – the pronoun is in spoken language practically always used (compare the usage of sinä (you sg)).
      • When addressing one person politely or formally, it is recommended to capitalize the pronoun in writing: Te.
      • When addressing only one person (even politely), the active past participle must be in the singular in the compound forms that use it (e.g. negative, perfect, pluperfect forms):
        • Te ette ollut täällä silloin. (negative past indicative)You were not here at that time.
        • Te olette ollut täällä silloin. (affirmative present perfect indicative)You have been here at that time.
        • Te ette ole ollut täällä silloin. (negative present perfect indicative)You have not been here at that time.
        • Te olisitte ollut täällä silloin. (affirmative present perfect conditional)You would have been here at that time.
        • Te ette olisi ollut täällä silloin. (negative present perfect conditional)You would have not been here at that time.
        • Te lienette ollut täällä silloin. (affirmative present perfect potential)You have probably been here at that time.
        • Te ette liene ollut täällä silloin. (negative present perfect potential)You haven't probably been here at that time.
        • Te olitte ollut täällä silloin. (affirmative past perfect indicative)You had been here at that time.
        • Te ette ollut ollut täällä silloin. (negative past perfect indicative; note the duplicate ollut)You had not been here at that time.

      Declension

      [edit]
      • Irregular (inflectional stem tei-, as if in the plural). The comitative and instructive forms don't exist; the abessive is hardly used.
      • In addition to the standard set of cases, te and other personal pronouns have a specific accusative form, teidät.
      • See this appendix for information on the dialectal variants of te.

      Synonyms

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      Derived terms

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      Descendants

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      See also

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      Finnish personal pronouns
      first second third
      familiar polite
      singular minä sinä Te hän
      plural me te he

      Further reading

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      Anagrams

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      Franco-Provençal

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      Etymology

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      Inherited from Latin .

      Pronoun

      [edit]

      te (prevocalic t', postpositive -tu) (ORB, broad)

      1. you (second-person singular nominative)

      See also

      [edit]
      Franco-Provençal personal pronouns
      nominative accusative dative tonic1 possessive2
      singular 1st person jo min
      2nd person te tin
      3rd person masculine il lo / le lui sin
      feminine el la lyé
      neuter o y
      reflexive
      plural 1st person nos noutro
      2nd person vos voutro
      3rd person masculine ils los / les lor lor
      feminine els les lor / lyés
      reflexive

      1 Disjunctive or object of a preposition.   2 Generally preceded by a definite article.

      References

      [edit]
      • tu in DicoFranPro: Dictionnaire Français/Francoprovençal – on dicofranpro.llm.umontreal.ca
      • te in Lo trèsor Arpitan – on arpitan.eu

      French

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      Etymology

      [edit]

      From Middle French te, from Old French te, from Latin , (accusative of ), from Proto-Indo-European *twé, *te, accusative of *túh₂ (you).

      Pronunciation

      [edit]

      Pronoun

      [edit]

      te m or f

      1. (direct object) you
        Il te cite souvent.He often quotes you.
      2. (indirect object) you
        Il te donne le livre.He gives you the book.
      3. (reflexive pronoun) yourself
        Tu te souviens d'elle.You remember her. (literally, “You remind yourself of her.”)
      [edit]
      French personal pronouns
      number person gender nominative
      (subject)
      accusative
      (direct complement)
      dative
      (indirect complement)
      locative
      (at)
      genitive
      (of)
      disjunctive
      (tonic)1
      emphatic
      reflexive
      relative proximal distal
      singular first je, j’ me, m’ moi moi-même
      second tu te, t’ toi toi-même
      third masculine il2 le, l’ lui y en lui lui-même celui celui-ci celui-là
      feminine elle la, l’ elle elle-même celle celle-ci celle-là
      indeterminate on3, l’on (formal), ce4, c’, ça ce ceci cela, ça
      reflexive se, s’5 soi soi-même
      plural first nous nous nous nous-mêmes
      second6 vous vous vous vous-mêmes,
      vous-même6
      third masculine ils7 les leur y en eux7 eux-mêmes7 ceux ceux-ci ceux-là
      feminine elles elles elles-mêmes celles celles-ci celles-là

      1 The disjunctive (tonic) forms are also used after an explicit preposition (de/d’, à, pour, chez, dans, vers, sur, sous, ...), instead the accusative, dative, genitive, locative, or reflexive forms, where a preposition is implied.
      2 Il is also used as an impersonal nominative-only pronoun.
      3 On can also function as a first person plural (although agreeing with third person singular verb forms).
      4 The nominal indeterminate form ce (demonstrative) can also be used with the auxiliary verb être as a plural, instead of the proximal or distal gendered forms.
      5 The reflexive third person singular forms (se or s’) for accusative or dative are also used as third person plural reflexive.
      6 Vous is also used as the polite singular form, in which case the plural disjunctive tonic vous-mêmes becomes singular vous-même.
      7 Ils, eux and eux-mêmes are also used when a group has a mixture of masculine and feminine members.

      Further reading

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      Anagrams

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      Galician

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      Etymology 1

      [edit]

      Noun

      [edit]

      te f (plural tes)

      1. The name of the Latin-script letter T/t.

      Etymology 2

      [edit]

      See the etymology of the corresponding lemma form.

      Pronoun

      [edit]

      te

      1. inflection of ti:
        1. accusative
        2. reflexive
      [edit]

      Haitian Creole

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      Pronunciation

      [edit]

      Etymology 1

      [edit]

      From French été (been).

      Adverb

      [edit]

      te

      1. Indicates the past or pluperfect tense.

      Etymology 2

      [edit]

      From French thé (tea), from Hokkien ().

      Noun

      [edit]

      te

      1. tea

      Hawaiian

      [edit]

      Article

      [edit]

      te

      1. Niʻihau form of ke (the)
        Te kula.
        The school.

      Hungarian

      [edit]

      Etymology

      [edit]

      From the same Proto-Uralic root *tinä as e.g. Finnish sinä, Erzya тон (ton),[1] Eastern Mari тый (tyj) and Komi-Zyrian тэ (te).

      Pronunciation

      [edit]

      Pronoun

      [edit]

      te

      1. (personal) you (second-person singular, nominative, informal form)

      Declension

      [edit]
      Declension of te
      nominative te
      accusative téged
      dative neked
      instrumental veled
      causal-final érted
      inessive benned
      superessive rajtad
      adessive nálad
      illative beléd
      sublative rád
      allative hozzád
      elative belőled
      delative rólad
      ablative tőled

      Coordinate terms

      [edit]
      Hungarian personal pronouns
      singular plural
      1st person én mi
      2nd person familiar te ti
      polite, unfamiliar maga maguk
      formal ön önök
      3rd person ő ők

      Derived terms

      [edit]

      Note: In all these forms, te is optional and only serves for emphasis.

      See also

      [edit]

      References

      [edit]

      Further reading

      [edit]
      • ([informal, singular] you): te in Géza Bárczi, László Országh, et al., editors, A magyar nyelv értelmező szótára [The Explanatory Dictionary of the Hungarian Language] (ÉrtSz.), Budapest: Akadémiai Kiadó, 1959–1962. Fifth ed., 1992: →ISBN.
      • ([dialectal] stressing the plural addressee): te in Géza Bárczi, László Országh, et al., editors, A magyar nyelv értelmező szótára [The Explanatory Dictionary of the Hungarian Language] (ÉrtSz.), Budapest: Akadémiai Kiadó, 1959–1962. Fifth ed., 1992: →ISBN.

      Hunsrik

      [edit]

      Article

      [edit]

      te (Wiesemann spelling)

      1. alternative spelling of de

      Icelandic

      [edit]
      Icelandic Wikipedia has an article on:
      Wikipedia is

      Etymology

      [edit]

      Borrowed from Hokkien () (Amoy dialect).

      Pronunciation

      [edit]

      Noun

      [edit]

      te n (genitive singular tes, no plural)

      1. tea

      Declension

      [edit]
      Declension of te (sg-only neuter)
      singular
      indefinite definite
      nominative te teið
      accusative te teið
      dative tei teinu
      genitive tes tesins

      Derived terms

      [edit]

      Ido

      [edit]

      Etymology

      [edit]

      From t +‎ -e.

      Pronunciation

      [edit]

      Noun

      [edit]

      te (plural te-i)

      1. The name of the Latin script letter T/t.

      See also

      [edit]

      Indonesian

      [edit]

      Etymology

      [edit]

      From Dutch tee.

      Pronunciation

      [edit]

      Noun

      [edit]

      (plural te-te)

      1. The name of the Latin-script letter T/t.

      Synonyms

      [edit]
      • ti (Standard Malay)

      See also

      [edit]

      Further reading

      [edit]

      Irish

      [edit]

      Etymology

      [edit]

      From Old Irish (hot),[1] from Proto-Celtic *teɸents, from Proto-Indo-European *tep-.

      Pronunciation

      [edit]

      Adjective

      [edit]

      te (genitive singular masculine te, genitive singular feminine te, plural teo, comparative teo or teocha)

      1. hot, warm
      2. hot, spicy, piquant

      Declension

      [edit]
      Declension of te
      Positive singular plural
      masculine feminine strong noun weak noun
      nominative te the teo;
      theo2
      vocative the teo
      genitive te teo te
      dative te;
      the1
      the teo;
      theo2
      Comparative níos teo
      Superlative is teo

      1 When the preceding noun is lenited and governed by the definite article.
      2 When the preceding noun ends in a slender consonant.

      Derived terms

      [edit]
      [edit]

      Mutation

      [edit]
      Mutated forms of te
      radical lenition eclipsis
      te the dte

      Note: Certain mutated forms of some words can never occur in standard Modern Irish.
      All possible mutated forms are displayed for convenience.

      References

      [edit]
      1. ^ Gregory Toner, Sharon Arbuthnot, Máire Ní Mhaonaigh, Marie-Luise Theuerkauf, Dagmar Wodtko, editors (2019), “té, te”, in eDIL: Electronic Dictionary of the Irish Language
      2. ^ Sjoestedt, M. L. (1931), Phonétique d’un parler irlandais de Kerry [Phonetics of an Irish Dialect of Kerry] (in French), Paris: Librairie Ernest Leroux, § 108, page 59
      3. ^ Finck, F. N. (1899), Die araner mundart [The Aran Dialect] (in German), Zweiter Band: Wörterbuch [Second volume: Dictionary], Marburg: Elwert’sche Verlagsbuchhandlung, page 245
      4. ^ Quiggin, E. C. (1906), A Dialect of Donegal, Cambridge University Press, § 388, page 129

      Further reading

      [edit]

      Italian

      [edit]

      Etymology

      [edit]

      Inherited from Latin , from .

      Pronunciation

      [edit]

      Pronoun

      [edit]

      te

      1. (disjunctive, emphatic) you, thee
      2. (subject, colloquial[4] and regional[4]) you, thou
        Synonym: tu
        • 2022, “Italiani a Londra [Italians in London]”, in Devastante, performed by Il Pagante ft. J-Ax:
          E sai pure te quanto amo il Big Ben, ma, non dirlo a nessuno, I miss you Milan!
          And even you know how much love Big Ben, but, don't tell anyone, I miss you Milan!
        • 2020, “16 marzo [March 16]”, in 1969 – Achille Idol Rebirth, performed by Achille Lauro:
          [] perché per te l'amore dura un anno, perché te sai solo cancellarlo []
          [] because, for you, love [only] lasts one year, because you only know how to erase it []

      Pronoun

      [edit]

      te

      1. (clitic) alternative form of ti

      Usage notes

      [edit]
      • Used when followed by a third-person direct object clitic (lo, la, li, le, or ne).

      See also

      [edit]
      Italian personal pronouns
      Number Person Gender Nominative Reflexive Accusative Dative Combined Disjunctive Locative Partitive
      Singular first io mi, m', -mi me me
      second tu ti, t', -ti te te
      third m lui si2, s', -si lo, l', -lo gli, -gli glie, se2 lui, ci, c',
      vi, v' (formal)
      ne, n'
      f lei, Lei1 la, La1, l', L'1, -la, -La1 le3, Le1, -le3, -Le1 lei, Lei1,
      Plural first noi ci, c', -ci ce noi
      second voi, Voi4 vi, Vi4, v', V'4, -vi, -Vi4 ve voi, Voi4
      third m loro, Loro1 si, s', -si li, Li1, -li, -Li1 gli, -gli, loro (formal),
      Loro1
      glie, se loro, Loro1, ci, c',
      vi, v' (formal)
      ne, n'
      f le, Le1, -le, -Le1
      1 Third person pronominal forms used as formal terms of address to refer to second person subjects (with the first letter frequently capitalised as a sign of respect, and to distinguish them from third person subjects). Unlike the singular forms, the plural forms are mostly antiquated terms of formal address in the modern language, and second person plural pronouns are almost always used instead.
      2 Also used as indefinite pronoun meaning “one”, and to form the passive.
      3 Often replaced by gli, -gli in informal language.
      4 Formal (capitalisation optional); in many regions, can refer to just one person (compare with French vous).

      References

      [edit]
      1. 1.0 1.1 te in Luciano Canepari, Dizionario di Pronuncia Italiana (DiPI)
      2. ^ te (disjunctive) in Bruno Migliorini et al., Dizionario d'ortografia e di pronunzia, Rai Eri, 2025
      3. ^ te (clitic) in Bruno Migliorini et al., Dizionario d'ortografia e di pronunzia, Rai Eri, 2025
      4. 4.0 4.1 te1 in Treccani.it – Vocabolario Treccani on line, Istituto dell'Enciclopedia Italiana

      Anagrams

      [edit]

      Japanese

      [edit]

      Romanization

      [edit]

      te

      1. The hiragana syllable (te) or the katakana syllable (te) in Hepburn romanization.

      Kalasha

      [edit]

      Etymology

      [edit]

      From Sanskrit तद् (tád), from Proto-Indo-European *tód.

      Pronoun

      [edit]

      te

      1. they, them (absent from speaker) (3rd-person plural personal pronoun)

      Coordinate terms

      [edit]

      See also

      [edit]
      Kalasha personal pronouns
      singular plural
      1st person a / آ ábi / آبی
      2nd person tu / تُو ábi / آبی
      3rd person near ía / اِیا émi / ایمی
      far ása / آسا éḷi / ایࣇی
      absent se / سے te / تے

      Kholosi

      [edit]

      Etymology

      [edit]

      Cognate with Sindhi تي (te), Punjabi 'ਤੇ ('te).

      Postposition

      [edit]

      te

      1. to

      References

      [edit]
      • Rezaei, Tahereh (2020), First notes on the syntax of Kholosi as a heritage language in the south of Iran[6], Hormozgan Cultural Heritage, Handcrafts & Tourism Organization

      Kikuyu

      [edit]

      Etymology

      [edit]

      Hinde (1904) records kute as an equivalent of English throw in the “Jogowini dialect” of Kikuyu.[1]

      Pronunciation

      [edit]

      Verb

      [edit]

      te (infinitive gũte)

      1. to throw away
        teagawe (usually) throw away

      See also

      [edit]

      References

      [edit]
      1. ^ Hinde, Hildegarde (1904). Vocabularies of the Kamba and Kikuyu languages of East Africa, pp. 60–61. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
      • Armstrong, Lilias E. (1940). The Phonetic and Tonal Structure of Kikuyu, p. 363. Rep. 1967. (Also in 2018 by Routledge).

      Ladin

      [edit]

      Etymology

      [edit]

      From Latin intus.[1]

      Preposition

      [edit]

      te

      1. (Badiot, Fascian, Gherdëina) in, inside, into
        L ie te cësa.It is in the house.
        Ei abinà la tleves tl (te l) castl.I found the keys in the closet.
        Ël ie te na bar.He is at a coffee shop.
        L lere ie te perjon.The thief is in prison.
      2. in (pertaining to)
        te chësc cajoin this case
      3. in, at, by (at the end of or during a period of time)
        L film scumëncia te 20 menuc.The film starts in 20 minutes.
        tl (te l) Medieveduring the middle ages
        ti (te i) ani '60in the 60s
      4. into, to (going inside (of))
        Ël va te cësa.He goes into the house.
        Nëus jon te la Svizra.We are going to Switzerland.

      Alternative forms

      [edit]

      Derived terms

      [edit]
      • (te + l) tl
      • (te + la) tla
      • (te + i) ti
      • (te + les) les

      References

      [edit]
      1. ^ Wörterbuch der Grödner Mundart.- (Schlern-Schriften ; 23) - Arcangjul Lardschneider [2]. Teßmann

      Latin

      [edit]

      Pronunciation

      [edit]

      Etymology 1

      [edit]

        From a merger of:

        Pronoun

        [edit]

        1. accusative/ablative singular of
        Alternative forms
        [edit]
        Derived terms
        [edit]
        Descendants
        [edit]
        • Aromanian: ti
        • Asturian: te
        • Catalan: te
        • Franco-Provençal:
        • French: te, toi
        • Friulian: ti
        • Galician: te, che
        • Istriot: tèi, te
        • Italian: te, ti
        • Judeo-Italian: טִי (ṭi /⁠ti⁠/)
        • Mozarabic: ت (t), תי (ty)
        • Portuguese: te
        • Romanian: te
        • Sicilian: ti
        • Spanish: te

        Etymology 2

        [edit]

          Derived from Etruscan. Etruscan names of stops were the stop followed by /eː/.[2]

          Noun

          [edit]

           f (indeclinable)

          1. The name of the Latin-script letter T/t.[3]
          Coordinate terms
          [edit]

          References

          [edit]
          1. ^ De Vaan, Michiel (2008), “tū”, in Etymological Dictionary of Latin and the other Italic Languages (Leiden Indo-European Etymological Dictionary Series; 7), Leiden, Boston: Brill, →ISBN, pages 631–632
          2. ^ Geoffrey Sampson (1985), Writing Systems: A Linguistic Introduction, Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press. →ISBN, page 109.
          3. ^ Arthur E. Gordon (1973), “The Letter Names of the Latin Alphabet, (University of California Press” (part III: “Summary of the Ancient Evidence”), in University of California Publications: Classical Studies, volume 9, page 32:
            "Clearly there is no question or doubt about the names of the vowels A, E, I, O, U. They are simply long A, long E, etc. (ā, ē, ī, ō, ū). Nor is there any uncertainty with respect to the six mutes B, C, D, G, P, T. Their names are bē, cē, dē, gē, pē, tē (each with a long E). Or about H, K, and Q: they are hā, kā, kū—each, again, with a long vowel sound."

          Further reading

          [edit]
          • te (pronoun)”, in Charlton T. Lewis and Charles Short (1879), A Latin Dictionary, Oxford: Clarendon Press
          • te (letter)”, in Charlton T. Lewis and Charles Short (1879), A Latin Dictionary, Oxford: Clarendon Press
          • te”, in Gaffiot, Félix (1934), Dictionnaire illustré latin-français, Hachette.
          • Carl Meißner; Henry William Auden (1894), Latin Phrase-Book[7], London: Macmillan and Co.
            • (ambiguous) I have not seen you for five years: quinque anni sunt or sextus annus est, cum te non vidi
            • (ambiguous) everything depends on you: in te omnia sunt
            • (ambiguous) the decision of the question rests with you: penes te arbitrium huius rei est
            • (ambiguous) I blame this in you; I censure you for this: hoc in te reprehendo (not ob eam rem)
            • (ambiguous) convince yourself of this; rest assured on this point: sic volo te tibi persuadere
            • (ambiguous) the matter speaks for itself: res ipsa (pro me apud te) loquitur
            • (ambiguous) be brave: fortem te praebe
            • (ambiguous) your health: bene tibi or te!
            • (ambiguous) a word with you: paucis te volo
            • (ambiguous) a word with you: tribus verbis te volo
            • (ambiguous) I bid you good-bye, take my leave: te valere iubeo
            • (ambiguous) good luck to you: macte virtute (esto or te esse iubeo)

          Latvian

          [edit]

          Pronunciation

          [edit]
          Request for audio pronunciation This entry needs an audio pronunciation. If you are a native speaker with a microphone, please record this word. The recorded pronunciation will appear here when it's ready.

          Adverb

          [edit]

          te

          1. here

          Conjunction

          [edit]

          te

          1. now..., now...
            te šur, te turnow here, now there

          Lingala

          [edit]

          Etymology

          [edit]

          Borrowed from Bangi te.

          Adverb

          [edit]

          te

          1. not

          Lithuanian

          [edit]

          Etymology

          [edit]

          Cognate with Latvian te. The interjection is identical to Ancient Greek τῆ (, here!, take this!), which Beekes derives from Proto-Indo-European *teh₁, the instrumental neuter singular form of *tód.[1] Compare Gothic 𐌱𐌹𐌸𐌴 (biþē, while), 𐌳𐌿𐌸𐌴 (duþē, therefore), Tocharian A ca-, Tocharian B ce (demonstrative pronoun) < *tē,[2] and possibly Old Armenian թէ (tʻē, that).

          Pronunciation

          [edit]

          Particle

          [edit]

          1. (with third person) may, let (used to indicate the optative mood)
            Ši̇̀ nakti̇̀s niẽkad nesibai̇̃gia. - May this night never end.

          Interjection

          [edit]

          1. (with object cases) here you go, take this (when giving something to someone)
            táu pinigų̃pir̃k sáu laũko kókį sklypẽlį.Here, have some money, go buy yourself a piece of land.

          Synonyms

          [edit]

          Derived terms

          [edit]

          References

          [edit]
          1. ^ Beekes, Robert S. P. (2010), Etymological Dictionary of Greek (Leiden Indo-European Etymological Dictionary Series; 10), with the assistance of Lucien van Beek, Leiden, Boston: Brill, →ISBN
          2. ^ Albert J. van Windekens (1979) Le tokharien confronté avec les autres langues indoeuropéennes. Vol. I. La phonétique et le vocabulaire. Louvain, page 249

          Lower Sorbian

          [edit]

          Pronunciation

          [edit]

          Determiner

          [edit]

          te

          1. nominative/accusative plural of ten

          Maltese

          [edit]

          Etymology

          [edit]

          Borrowed from Italian .

          Pronunciation

          [edit]

          Noun

          [edit]

          te m (plural tejiet)

          1. tea

          Manchu

          [edit]

          Romanization

          [edit]

          te

          1. romanization of ᡨᡝ

          Mandarin

          [edit]

          Romanization

          [edit]

          te (te5 / te0, Zhuyin ˙ㄊㄜ)

          1. Hanyu Pinyin reading of

          Romanization

          [edit]

          te

          1. nonstandard spelling of
          2. nonstandard spelling of
          3. nonstandard spelling of tê̄

          Usage notes

          [edit]
          • Transcriptions of Mandarin into the Latin script often do not distinguish between the critical tonal differences employed in the Mandarin language, using words such as this one without indication of tone.

          Manx

          [edit]

          Pronunciation

          [edit]

          Contraction

          [edit]

          te

          1. contraction of ta +‎ eh, literally he/it is
            Te myr shen.
            It is so.

          Usage notes

          [edit]

          An orthographic distinction is made in Classical Manx texts between t'eh 'he is' and te 'it is'.

          See also

          [edit]

          Maori

          [edit]

          Etymology

          [edit]

          (This etymology is missing or incomplete. Please add to it, or discuss it at the Etymology scriptorium.)

          Compare Hawaiian ka (the). False cognate of English the, but might have been reinforced by it.

          Pronunciation

          [edit]

          Article

          [edit]

          te sg (plural ngā)

          1. the
            • 2006, Joanne Barker, Sovereignty Matters, page 208:
              Ko te reo te mauri o te mana Maori.
              The language is the life principle of Maori mana.

          Determiner

          [edit]

          te sg (plural ngā)

          1. Referring to a whole class of things or people designated by the noun that follows.
            Kī tonu te wharenui i te tamariki.
            The meeting house was full of children.
          2. Mr, mister, sir (capitalised)
            Kei Te Wharehuia, tēnei te mihi atu mō tō āwhina mai.
            Wharehuia sir, thank you most sincerely for your help.
          3. Used in front of another verb following a stative.
            Kua oti i a au tāku pukapuka te tuhi.
            I have finished writing my book.
          4. Used in front of another verb following taea.
            Ka taea e ia tēnei waiata te whakamāori.
            She will be able to interpret this song.
          5. Used before the names for the days of the week.
            Ā te Rātapu mātou haere ai ki Poihākena.
            We go to Sydney on Saturday.
          6. Sometimes used before numbers with a following noun.
            I tāwāhi a Pita mō te rima tau.
            Peter was overseas for five years.
          7. Used before ordinal numbers including those using tua-.
            I piki a Tāne-nui-a-rangi ki te tuangahuru mā rua o ngā rangi.
            Tāne-nui-a-rangi climbed to the twelfth realm.

          See also

          [edit]
          • he (for "a/an" and "some")

          References

          [edit]
          • te” in John C. Moorfield, Te Aka: Maori–English, English–Maori Dictionary and Index, 3rd edition, Longman/Pearson Education New Zealand, 2011, →ISBN.

          Meriam

          [edit]

          Noun

          [edit]

          te

          1. mouth
          2. door

          Middle Dutch

          [edit]

          Etymology

          [edit]

          From Old Dutch te, from Proto-Germanic *ta.

          Pronunciation

          [edit]

          Preposition

          [edit]

          te

          1. at, in (a place)
          2. to, towards
          3. at, during (a time)
          4. for (the purpose of)
          5. in accordance with
          6. with, from (a means, such as language)
          7. (with gerund) to, for

          Alternative forms

          [edit]

          Descendants

          [edit]

          Adverb

          [edit]

          te

          1. very, particularly
          2. too, to an excessive degree

          Alternative forms

          [edit]

          Descendants

          [edit]

          Further reading

          [edit]

          Middle English

          [edit]

          Pronoun

          [edit]

          te

          1. alternative form of þe (thee)

          Middle French

          [edit]

          Alternative forms

          [edit]
          • t' (before a vowel)

          Etymology

          [edit]

          From Old French te.

          Pronoun

          [edit]

          te

          1. you, second-person singular object pronoun
          2. to you, second-person singular indirect object pronoun

          Synonyms

          [edit]
          • (second-person singular object and indirect object pronoun): toy (with verbs in the imperative)
          • (second-person singular object and indirect object pronoun): vous (used as a mark of formality or respect)

          Descendants

          [edit]
          • French: te

          Mohawk

          [edit]

          Particle

          [edit]

          te

          1. used with iah to negate a sentence

          Neapolitan

          [edit]

          Etymology

          [edit]

          From Latin .

          Pronunciation

          [edit]

          Pronoun

          [edit]

          te

          1. you (singular familiar, accusative or dative or reflexive or prepositional)

          Coordinate terms

          [edit]
          Neapolitan personal pronouns
          nominative accusative dative reflexive possessive prepositional
          singular first person io (i') me mìo, mìa, mieje, meje me, méne
          second
          person
          familiar tu te tùjo, tòja, tùoje, tòje te, téne
          formal vuje ve vuósto, vósta, vuóste, vóste vuje
          third
          person
          m ìsso 'o, 'u (lo, lu) 'i, 'e (li, le) se sùjo, sòja, sùoje, sòje ìsso
          f éssa 'a (la) 'e (le) éssa
          plural first person nuje ce nuósto, nòsta, nuóste, nòste nuje
          second person vuje ve vuósto, vòsta, vuóste, vòste vuje
          third
          person
          m ìsse 'i, 'e (li, le) llòro se llòro (invariable) llòro
          f llòro 'e (le)

          Norwegian Bokmål

          [edit]

          Pronunciation

          [edit]

          Etymology 1

          [edit]

          From Dutch thee.

          Noun

          [edit]

          te m (definite singular teen)

          1. tea
          Derived terms
          [edit]

          Etymology 2

          [edit]

          From Old Norse tjá.

          Verb

          [edit]

          te (imperative te, present tense ter, passive tes, simple past tedde, past participle tedd, present participle teende)

          1. (reflexive) to behave

          References

          [edit]

          Norwegian Nynorsk

          [edit]

          Pronunciation

          [edit]

          Etymology 1

          [edit]

          From Dutch thee.

          Noun

          [edit]

          te m (definite singular teen)

          1. tea
          Derived terms
          [edit]

          Etymology 2

          [edit]

          From Old Norse tjá.

          Verb

          [edit]

          te (present tense ter, past tense tedde, past participle tedd or tett, passive infinitive teast, present participle teande, imperative te)

          1. (reflexive) to behave

          Etymology 3

          [edit]

          From Old Norse til.

          Preposition

          [edit]

          te

          1. (dialectal, Trøndelag, Østlandet) alternative form of til

          References

          [edit]

          Occitan

          [edit]

          Pronunciation

          [edit]

          Noun

          [edit]

          te f (plural tes)

          1. tee (the letter t, T)

          Old English

          [edit]

          Etymology

          [edit]

          From Proto-Germanic *ta (to).

          Pronunciation

          [edit]

          Preposition

          [edit]

          te

          1. to
            • Heom te cwæþ (He said to him)
              Mt. Kmbl. Rush. 26, 21.
            • Ālēfed te habbanne (Allowed to have)
              Swt. 445, 30: 50.
          [edit]

          Old French

          [edit]

          Etymology

          [edit]

          From Latin .

          Pronoun

          [edit]

          te

          1. you (second-person singular direct object pronoun)
          2. to you (second-person singular indirect object pronoun)
          3. yourself (second-person singular direct object reflexive pronoun)
          4. to yourself (second-person singular indirect object reflexive pronoun)

          Pali

          [edit]

          Alternative forms

          [edit]

          Adjective

          [edit]

          te

          1. masculine nominative/accusative plural of ta (that)

          Pronoun

          [edit]

          te

          1. nominative/accusative plural of ta (they)
          2. instrumental/dative/genitive singular of tvaṃ (you)

          Papiamentu

          [edit]

          Etymology

          [edit]

          From Portuguese até.

          Adjective

          [edit]

          te

          1. until, till, up to, up until

          Phuthi

          [edit]

          Etymology

          [edit]

          (This etymology is missing or incomplete. Please add to it, or discuss it at the Etymology scriptorium.)

          Conjunction

          [edit]

          1. just, only, however

          Relative

          [edit]

          -té

          1. naked

          Inflection

          [edit]
          Relative concord, tone H
          modifier copulative
          1st singular legite gite
          2nd singular lote ute
          1st plural lesite site
          2nd plural lelite lite
          class 1 lote ute
          class 2 labate bate
          class 3 lote ute
          class 4 lete ite
          class 5 lelite lite
          class 6 late ate
          class 7 lesite site
          class 8 letite tite
          class 9 lete ite
          class 10 letite tite
          class 14 lobute bute
          class 15 lokute kute
          class 17 lokute kute

          Polish

          [edit]

          Pronunciation

          [edit]

          Pronoun

          [edit]

          te m

          1. nonvirile nominative/accusative plural of ten

          Pronoun

          [edit]

          te f

          1. nominative/accusative plural of ta

          Pronoun

          [edit]

          te n

          1. nominative/accusative plural of to

          Portuguese

          [edit]

          Etymology

          [edit]

          From Old Galician-Portuguese te, from Latin (accusative of ), from Proto-Indo-European *twé, *te, accusative of *túh₂ (you).

          Pronunciation

          [edit]
           

          Pronoun

          [edit]

          te

          1. (object pronoun) you (singular)
            Vem comigo; levar-te-ei a casa. (formal)
            Vem comigo, vou te levar pra casa. (informal)
            Come with me; I will take you home.
          2. particle of spontaneity, when it indicates that there was spontaneity in the action by its agent.
            Vais-te muito cedo.
            You are leaving too soon.

          Quotations

          [edit]

          For quotations using this term, see Citations:te.

          See also

          [edit]
          Portuguese personal pronouns
          number person nominative
          (subject)
          accusative
          (direct object)
          dative
          (indirect object)
          prepositional prepositional
          with com
          non-declining
          singular first eu me mim comigo
          second tu te ti contigo você
          o senhor m
          a senhora f
          third m ele o (lo, no) lhe ele com ele o mesmo
          f ela a (la, na) ela com ela a mesma
          plural first nós nos nós connosco (Portugal)
          conosco (Brazil)
          a gente
          second vós vos vós convosco
          com vós
          vocês
          os senhores m
          as senhoras f
          third m eles os (los, nos) lhes eles com eles os mesmos
          f elas as (las, nas) elas com elas as mesmas
          reflexive third /
          indefinite
          se si consigo o mesmo etc. (reflexive)

          Rapa Nui

          [edit]

          Article

          [edit]

          te (pl te mau)

          1. the (the definite article)

          Romani

          [edit]

          Conjunction

          [edit]

          te

          1. if

          Romanian

          [edit]

          Etymology

          [edit]

          From Latin (accusative of ), from Proto-Indo-European *twé, *te, accusative of *túh₂ (you).

          Pronunciation

          [edit]

          Pronoun

          [edit]

          te (unstressed accusative and reflexive form of tu)

          1. (direct object) you
            Știi cât de mult te iubește?'
            Do you know how much he loves you?
          2. (reflexive pronoun) yourself

          Derived terms

          [edit]
          [edit]

          See also

          [edit]

          Romansch

          [edit]

          Alternative forms

          [edit]

          Noun

          [edit]

          te m

          1. (Sursilvan) tea

          Sango

          [edit]

          Pronunciation

          [edit]

          Verb

          [edit]

          te

          1. to eat
          2. to bite

          Serbo-Croatian

          [edit]

          Etymology 1

          [edit]

          Pronoun

          [edit]

          te ? (Cyrillic spelling те)

          1. of you (clitic genitive singular of (you))
          2. you (clitic accusative singular of (you))
          3. feminine nominative plural of taj: those (= one)
            Tko su te žene?Who are those women?
          Declension
          [edit]
          Declension of te
          singular plural
          nominative
          genitive tȅbe, te vȃs
          dative tȅbi, ti vȁma, vam
          accusative tȅbe, te vȃs
          vocative ti
          locative tȅbi vȁma
          instrumental tȍbōm vȁma

          Etymology 2

          [edit]

          From Proto-Slavic *ta. Compare Ukrainian та (ta).

          Conjunction

          [edit]

          te (Cyrillic spelling те)

          1. and (following a cause; lit. and thereby, and thus)
            Poskliznuo sam se te pao.
            I slipped and fell.
          2. and, and then (before the last thing in order of mention or occurrence)
            U posljednjih godinu dana bio sam u Beogradu, Zagrebu, Sarajevu te Podgorici.
            In the past year, I have been to Belgrade, Zagreb, Sarajevo and Podgorica.
            Obukao sam se, izašao iz kuće, zaključao vrata te otišao na posao.
            I got dressed up, got out of the house, locked the door and then went to work.
          3. (Croatia) now (chiefly used in stock phrases)
            Problemi gdje god pogledaš! Te tu, te tamo!
            Problems, wherever you look! Now here, now there!

          Sicilian

          [edit]

          Alternative forms

          [edit]

          Etymology

          [edit]

          Borrowed from French thé, from Dutch thee, from Hokkien ().

          Pronunciation

          [edit]
          • IPA(key): /tɛ/ (Standard)
          • Hyphenation: te

          Noun

          [edit]

          te m

          1. tea

          Derived terms

          [edit]

          See also

          [edit]

          Spanish

          [edit]

          Pronunciation

          [edit]

          Etymology 1

          [edit]

          Noun

          [edit]

          te f (plural tes)

          1. The name of the Latin-script letter T/t.

          Etymology 2

          [edit]

          From Latin (accusative of ), from Proto-Indo-European *twé, *te, accusative of *túh₂ (you).

          Pronoun

          [edit]

          te

          1. dative of : to you, for you
            Te voy a hacer tus calzones...."La Cucaracha"
            I’m going to make your britches
          2. accusative of : you
          3. (reflexive pronoun) yourself
          See also
          [edit]
          Spanish personal pronouns
          Nominative Disjunctive Dative Accusative Comitative
          First-person Singular yo me conmigo
          Plural Masculine1 nosotros nos
          Feminine nosotras
          Second-person Singular Tuteo ti te contigo
          Voseo vos
          Formal2 Masculine1 usted le, se3 lo
          Feminine la
          Plural Familiar4 Masculine1 vosotros os
          Feminine vosotras
          Formal/general2 Masculine1 ustedes les, se3 los
          Feminine las
          Third-person Singular Masculine1 él le, se3 lo
          Feminine ella la
          Neuter ello5 lo
          Plural Masculine1 ellos les, se3 los
          Feminine ellas las
          Reflexive se consigo
          1. Like other masculine words, masculine pronouns can be used when the gender of the subject is unknown or when the subject is plural and of mixed gender.
          2. Treated as if it were third person for purposes of conjugation and reflexivity.
          3. If le or les precedes lo, la, los, or las in a clause, it is replaced with se (e.g. se lo dije instead of *le lo dije).
          4. Used primarily in Spain.
          5. Used only in rare circumstances.

          Further reading

          [edit]

          Sranan Tongo

          [edit]

          Pronunciation

          [edit]
          • IPA(key): /te/, [tɪ̞], [te̝]

          Etymology 1

          [edit]

          From English then.

          Conjunction

          [edit]

          te

          1. when
            • 1984, “Nioni”, in Telefôn' mi koe mi koenoe, performed by The Exmo Stars and Boogie:
              Te yu no man fu tyari akata / yu no mu trobi matuku
              If you aren't able to carry a headpad / you shouldn't bother with a basket

          Etymology 2

          [edit]

          From English till or Dutch te.

          Preposition

          [edit]

          te

          1. until

          Etymology 3

          [edit]

          Borrowed from Dutch thee.

          Noun

          [edit]

          te

          1. tea
          Descendants
          [edit]
          • Aukan: te
          • Saramaccan:

          Sumerian

          [edit]

          Romanization

          [edit]

          te

          1. romanization of 𒋼

          Swedish

          [edit]
          Swedish Wikipedia has an article on:
          Wikipedia sv
          en kopp te [a cup of tea]

          Alternative forms

          [edit]

          Pronunciation

          [edit]

          Etymology 1

          [edit]

          From either French thé or German Tee, ultimately from Hokkien ().

          Noun

          [edit]

          te n

          1. tea (the tree, its dried leaves and the drink made from them)
            dricka en kopp te
            drink a cup of tea
            brygga te
            brew tea
            Låt teet dra i fyra minuter
            Let the tea steep for four minutes
            tepåse
            teabag
          Declension
          [edit]
          Derived terms
          [edit]
          Descendants
          [edit]
          • Finnish: tee
          See also
          [edit]

          Etymology 2

          [edit]

          From Old Swedish tēa, from Old Norse tjá, from Proto-Germanic *tīhaną, from Proto-Indo-European *deyḱ-. Cognate of Gothic 𐌲𐌰𐍄𐌴𐌹𐌷𐌰𐌽 (gateihan), German zeihen, Dutch tijgen.

          Verb

          [edit]

          te (present ter, preterite tedde, supine tett, imperative te)

          1. (reflexive) to appear (a certain way)
            Och gräshopporna tedde sig såsom hästar, rustade till strid.
            And the shapes of the locusts [were] like unto horses prepared unto battle (Revelations 9:7)
          Conjugation
          [edit]
          Conjugation of te (weak)
          active passive
          infinitive te
          supine tett
          imperative te
          imper. plural1 ten
          present past present past
          indicative ter tedde
          ind. plural1 te tedde
          subjunctive2 te tedde
          present participle teende
          past participle

          1 Archaic. 2 Dated. See the appendix on Swedish verbs.

          [edit]

          Etymology 3

          [edit]

          Eye dialect spelling of till, for some dialects.

          Preposition

          [edit]

          te

          1. synonym of till
          Usage notes
          [edit]

          Rarely in written form unless imitating speech.

          References

          [edit]

          Anagrams

          [edit]

          Tagalog

          [edit]

          Pronunciation

          [edit]

          Etymology 1

          [edit]

          Borrowed from Spanish te, the Spanish name of the letter T / t.

          Noun

          [edit]

          te (Baybayin spelling ᜆᜒ) (historical)

          1. the name of the Latin-script letter T/t, in the Abecedario
            Synonyms: (in the Filipino alphabet) ti, (in the Abakada alphabet) ta

          Etymology 2

          [edit]

          Noun

          [edit]

          te (Baybayin spelling ᜆᜒ) (colloquial)

          1. clipping of ate, term of address for an elder sister, female senior, or any female older than the speaker; sis
            Huwag ka maingay, te! Nag-aaral ako!
            Don't be noisy, sis! I'm studying!
            Te, ano ba?
            Sis, what is it now?
          Usage notes
          [edit]
          • Only used as a term of address.
          Alternative forms
          [edit]

          Further reading

          [edit]
          • te”, in Pambansang Diksiyonaryo | Diksiyonaryo.ph, Manila, 2018.

          Tahitian

          [edit]

          Article

          [edit]

          te (plural sometimes te mau)

          1. the (singular) (definite article)
          2. the (plural) (definite article)
          3. (conversationally) a, an (indefinite article)

          References

          [edit]

          Tokelauan

          [edit]

          Etymology

          [edit]

          From Proto-Polynesian *te. Cognates include Hawaiian ke and Samoan le.

          Pronunciation

          [edit]
          • IPA(key): [te]
          • Hyphenation: te

          Article

          [edit]

          te

          1. Singular definite article; the

          Derived terms

          [edit]

          See also

          [edit]
          Tokelauan articles
          impersonal
          singular plural
          definite te
          indefinite he ni
          personal
          nominal pronominal
          simple ia
          after i/ki a a te
          after mai ia te

          References

          [edit]
          • R. Simona, editor (1986), Tokelau Dictionary[8], Auckland: Office of Tokelau Affairs, page 379

          Tongan

          [edit]

          Pronunciation

          [edit]

          Particle

          [edit]

          te

          1. will (future tense particle)

          Turkish

          [edit]

          Etymology 1

          [edit]

          Noun

          [edit]

          te

          1. The name of the Latin-script letter T/t.
          See also
          [edit]

          Etymology 2

          [edit]

          Noun

          [edit]

          te

          1. Letter of the Arabic alphabet: ت

          Etymology 3

          [edit]

          Adverb

          [edit]

          te

          1. alternative form of ta

          Turkmen

          [edit]

          Noun

          [edit]

          te (definite accusative [please provide], plural [please provide])

          1. The name of the Latin-script letter T/t.

          Tuvaluan

          [edit]

          Article

          [edit]

          te

          1. the (definite article)

          Veps

          [edit]

          Etymology

          [edit]

          From Proto-Finnic *tee.

          Noun

          [edit]

          te

          1. road, way

          Inflection

          [edit]
          Inflection of te (inflection type 13/ma)
          nominative sing. te
          genitive sing. ten
          partitive sing. ted
          partitive plur. teid
          singular plural
          nominative te ted
          accusative ten ted
          genitive ten teiden
          partitive ted teid
          essive-instructive ten tein
          translative teks teikš
          inessive tes teiš
          elative tespäi teišpäi
          illative tehe teihe
          adessive tel teil
          ablative telpäi teilpäi
          allative tele teile
          abessive teta teita
          comitative tenke teidenke
          prolative tedme teidme
          approximative I tenno teidenno
          approximative II tennoks teidennoks
          egressive tennopäi teidennopäi
          terminative I tehesai teihesai
          terminative II telesai teilesai
          terminative III tessai
          additive I tehepäi teihepäi
          additive II telepäi teilepäi

          Derived terms

          [edit]

          References

          [edit]
          • Zajceva, N. G.; Mullonen, M. I. (2007), “дорога, трасса”, in Uz’ venä-vepsläine vajehnik / Novyj russko-vepsskij slovarʹ [New Russian–Veps Dictionary]‎[9], Petrozavodsk: Periodika

          Volapük

          [edit]

          Adverb

          [edit]

          te

          1. only, solely, merely
          2. but

          Welsh

          [edit]

          Etymology

          [edit]

          Borrowed from English tea, from Dutch thee, from Hokkien (), probably via French thé or English tea.

          Pronunciation

          [edit]

          Noun

          [edit]

          te m (uncountable)

          1. (uncountable) tea (drink made with infusion of Camellia sinensis or other leaves)
          2. tea (main evening meal)
            Synonyms: swper, hwyrbryd, cywnos, cinio

          Derived terms

          [edit]

          Mutation

          [edit]
          Mutated forms of te
          radical soft nasal aspirate
          te de nhe the

          Note: Certain mutated forms of some words can never occur in standard Welsh.
          All possible mutated forms are displayed for convenience.

          Further reading

          [edit]
          • D. G. Lewis, N. Lewis, editors (2005–present), “te”, in Gweiadur: the Welsh–English Dictionary, Gwerin
          • R. J. Thomas, G. A. Bevan, P. J. Donovan, A. Hawke et al., editors (1950–present), “te”, in Geiriadur Prifysgol Cymru Online (in Welsh), University of Wales Centre for Advanced Welsh & Celtic Studies

          West Makian

          [edit]

          Etymology 1

          [edit]

          From Malay teh, possibly through Ternate tee, from Hokkien () (Amoy dialect).

          Pronunciation

          [edit]

          Noun

          [edit]

          te

          1. tea

          Etymology 2

          [edit]

          Pronunciation

          [edit]

          Conjunction

          [edit]

          te

          1. so; so that
            Synonym: supaya

          References

          [edit]
          • Clemens Voorhoeve (1982), The Makian languages and their neighbours[10], Pacific linguistics

          White Hmong

          [edit]

          Etymology

          [edit]

          From Proto-Hmong *tæwᶜ (frost).[1]

          This etymology is missing or incomplete. Please add to it, or discuss it at the Etymology scriptorium.
          Particularly: “Doesn't really resemble any other "frost" word in the area. There is a similarity to Hungarian dér (frost), which is generally cited by Magyarologists as being of unknown origin. It is worth noting that, in addition to frost being uncommon or even nonexistent in the regions where Hmong-Mien is spoken, the Hmongic term does not seem to exist in Mienic, and that Hmongic populations are distinguished from Mienics by a noticeable presence of a paternal lineage strongly associated with ancient northeastern Chinese and Uralic populations, the latter which Hungarian belongs to. Perhaps these two terms are linked, though the hypothetical timescale of the relationship makes this virtually impossible to verify.”

          Pronunciation

          [edit]

          Noun

          [edit]

          te (classifier: cov)

          1. frost

          References

          [edit]
          • Heimbach, Ernest E. (1979), White Hmong — English Dictionary[11], SEAP Publications, →ISBN, page 312.
          1. ^ Ratliff, Martha (2010), Hmong-Mien language history (Studies in Language Change; 8), Camberra, Australia: Pacific Linguistics, →ISBN, page 283.

          Zia

          [edit]

          Noun

          [edit]

          te

          1. foot