Definify.com

Definition 2024


deh

deh

See also: děh

Hupdë

Alternative forms

Noun

deh

  1. water

References

  • Patience Epps, A Grammar of Hup (2008)

Italian

Etymology

Probably from Latin dee, vocative form of deus (god, deity).

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /dɛ/, [d̪ɛ]
  • Hyphenation: dèh

Interjection

deh (poetic, literary)

  1. Used to introduce a prayer or request or a wishful statement; ah!, oh!
    • 1321, Dante Alighieri, La divina commedia: Inferno, Le Monnier (1994), Canto X, page 321 vv. 91-93:
      «Deh, or mi dì: quanto tesoro volle ¶ Nostro Segnore in prima da San Pietro ¶ ch'ei ponesse le chiavi in sua balia? [...]»
      «I pray thee tell me now how great a treasure ¶ Our Lord demanded of Saint Peter first, ¶ before he put the keys into his keeping? [...]»

Kurdish

Etymology

From Proto-Iranian *daśa, from Proto-Indo-Iranian *daća,[1] from Proto-Indo-European *déḱm̥t. Compare Avestan 𐬛𐬀𐬯𐬀 (dasa), Persian ده (dah), Ossetian дӕс (dæs), Pashto لس (ləs), Sanskrit दश (daśa), Urdu دس (das), also Armenian տասը (tasə), Greek δέκα (déka), Russian десять (desjatʹ), Latin decem, English ten.

Numeral

deh

  1. ten

References

  1. Benjamin W. Fortson IV (2010), “Indo-Iranian I: Indic”, in Indo-European Language and Culture: An Introduction, 2nd edition, page 203

Scots

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /dɛː/

Contraction

deh

  1. don't;
    A deh ken what ee mean! (example is in South Scots; "what" would be replaced by "whit" or "fit" and "ee" with "ye" in other Scots dialects)

Usage notes

  • Not used interrogatively and is not used in the third-person singular (the third-person singular equivalent of that is doesnae, or disnae in the Borders)

Yuhup

Noun

deh

  1. water

References

  • Jesús Mario Girón, Una gramática del wãńsöjöt (puinave) (2008): 'agua' (en hup y yuhup: deh, en nadëb: naʔɤy, en daw: nɤx, o en níkak cande)
  • HG