patte
From Wiktionary, the free dictionary
From Wiktionary, the free dictionary
patte (plural pattes)
Probably baby-talk. Compare Norwegian patte, Swedish patt.
patte or pat c (singular definite patten, plural indefinite patter)
Derived from the noun. Compare Norwegian patte, Swedish patta.
patte (past tense pattede, past participle pattet)
patte
From Middle French, from Old French pade, pate (“paw, foot of an animal”), from Vulgar Latin *patta (“paw, foot”), borrowed from Frankish *patta (“paw, sole of the foot”), from Proto-Germanic *pat-, *paþa- (“to walk, tread, go, step”), of uncertain origin and relation. Possibly from Proto-Indo-European *(s)pent-, *(s)pat- (“path; to walk”), a variant of Proto-Indo-European *pent-, *pat- (“path; to go”).
Cognate with Dutch poot (“paw”), Low German pedden (“to step, tread”). Related to English pad, path.
patte f (plural pattes)
patte f pl
(This etymology is missing or incomplete. Please add to it, or discuss it at the Etymology scriptorium.)
patte f (plural pattes)
Onomatopoeic (lydord)
patte m (definite singular patten, indefinite plural patter, definite plural pattene)
Onomatopoeic (lydord)
patte m (definite singular patten, indefinite plural pattar, definite plural pattane)
patte f (definite singular patta, indefinite plural patter, definite plural pattene)
patte
patte
patte c
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