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Definition 2024


Stella

Stella

See also: stella

English

Proper noun

Stella

  1. A female given name.
    • 1933 Eleanor Farjeon, Over the Garden Wall,Faber and Faber 1933, page 91 ("Girls' Names")
      What lovely names for girls there are! / There's Stella like the Evening Star,
  2. Stella Artois, a brand of beer; or a serving of such.
    I'm going to have a few Stellas tonight
    • 2006 Jamie Treays: Sheila (a song) :
      Sheila goes out with her mate Stella / It gets poured all over her fella
  3. A town in South Africa.
  4. A village in Missouri.
  5. A village in Nebraska.
  6. A town in Wisconsin.
  7. (US, numismatics) A gold coin with a face value of $4.00 proposed for use in the United States in the 19th century.

Related terms

Translations

Anagrams


Danish

Etymology

From Latin stella

Proper noun

Stella

  1. A female given name.

Faroese

Proper noun

Stella f

  1. A female given name

Usage notes

Matronymics

  • son of Stella: Stelluson
  • daughter of Stella: Stelludóttir

Declension

Singular
Indefinite
Nominative Stella
Accusative Stellu
Dative Stellu
Genitive Stellu

German

Etymology

From Latin stella

Proper noun

Stella

  1. A female given name.

Italian

Etymology

From Latin stella.

Proper noun

Stella

  1. A female given name.
  2. A commune in Liguria.
  3. A river that flows in Friuli-Venezia Giulia.

Swedish

Etymology

From Latin stella. First recorded as a Swedish name in 1857.

Proper noun

Stella

  1. A female given name.

stella

stella

See also: Stella

English

Noun

stella (plural stellae)

  1. (botany) A star-shaped structure.
    • 1939 June, Reed C. Rollins, “Studies in the Genus Lesquerella”, in American Journal of Botany, volume 26:
      Plants of this collection are several decimeters taller; the pedicels are more remote in the inforescence; the stellae are larger and form a less dense cover on plant parts, and the siliques are slightly larger than in the usual form of the species.
    • 1997 July, Maria de Fátima Agra & Michael Nee, “A new species of Solanum subgenus Leptostemonum (Solanaceae) from northeastern Brazil”, in Brittonia, volume 49:
      Stems and young branches terete, viscid, densely ferruginous-tomentose with sessile to short-stalked pauciradiate stellae bearing greatly prolonged 4-6-celled midpoints, these 0.1-0.2 cm long, gland-tipped, strongly armed with ferruginous laterally compressed prickles, these broad-based and sparsely glandular in the basal quarter.
    • 2008 December, Fang Chen & XiPing Dong, “The internal structure of Early Cambrian fossil embryo Olivooides revealed in the light of synchrotron X-ray tomographic microscopy”, in Chinese Science Bulletin, volume 53:
      The morphological and statistic analyses are also given to the stellae structure of Olivooides and Punctatus, which indicates that this structure is a result of adaptive evolu- tion to a lifestyle of fast-attaching after hatching, probably with the function of mucilage secretion.

Interlingua

Etymology

From Latin stella, from Proto-Italic *stērolā, from Proto-Indo-European *h₂stḗr.

Noun

stella (plural stellas)

  1. star

Italian

Etymology

From Latin stēlla, from Proto-Italic *stērolā, from Proto-Indo-European *h₂stḗr.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /ˈstel.la/, [ˈs̪t̪el̺.l̺a]
  • Hyphenation: stél‧la

Noun

stella f (plural stelle)

  1. a star

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Anagrams


Latin

Etymology

From Proto-Italic *stērolā, from Proto-Indo-European *h₂stḗr.

Pronunciation

Noun

stēlla f (genitive stēllae); first declension

  1. star
  2. planet

Inflection

First declension.

Case Singular Plural
nominative stēlla stēllae
genitive stēllae stēllārum
dative stēllae stēllīs
accusative stēllam stēllās
ablative stēllā stēllīs
vocative stēlla stēllae

Synonyms

Derived terms

Related terms

Descendants

References


Old Provençal

Etymology

From Latin stella, from Proto-Italic *stērolā, from Proto-Indo-European *h₂stḗr.

Noun

stella f (oblique plural stellas, nominative singular stella, nominative plural stellas)

  1. star

Descendants


Tarantino

Etymology

From Latin stella, from Proto-Italic *stērolā, from Proto-Indo-European *h₂stḗr.

Noun

stella

  1. star