dele
From Wiktionary, the free dictionary
From Wiktionary, the free dictionary
From Latin dēlē, second person singular imperative of dēleo (“delete”). Alternatively, a clipping of deleatur.
Audio (Southern England): | (file) |
dele (third-person singular simple present deles, present participle deleing, simple past and past participle deled)
dele (plural deles)
From Proto-Albanian *dailjā, from Proto-Indo-European *dʰeh₁-l-. Compare Old English delu (“teat”). More at djalë. Possibly the source of the Illyrian tribe name Dalmatae.
dele f (plural dele, definite delja, definite plural delet)
From Old Norse deila (“to divide, allot”), from Proto-Germanic *dailijaną, cognate of English deal and German teilen. In older Danish, the verb meant "to take to court”. The present verb has been influenced by Middle Low German dēlen (“to divide”).
dele (imperative del, infinitive at dele, present tense deler, past tense delte, perfect tense har delt)
See the etymology of the corresponding lemma form.
dele c
dele
dēlē
From Middle Low German dele, ultimately from Proto-Germanic *þiljǭ. Doublet of thylle (“thill”).
dele (plural deles)
dele
dele
dele
From Middle Low German delen.
dele (imperative del, present tense deler, passive deles, simple past delte, past participle delt)
From Middle Low German delen and Old Norse deila.
dele (present tense deler, past tense delte, past participle delt, passive infinitive delast, present participle delande, imperative del)
dele (feminine dela, masculine plural deles, feminine plural delas)
For quotations using this term, see Citations:dele.
dele (Cyrillic spelling деле)
dele
dele
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