paso
Spanish
adj
Definitions
- dry (said of fruit)
Etymology
Inherited from Latin passus (a step, step, pace, track, footstep, dried).
Origin
Latin
passus
Gloss
a step, step, pace, track, footstep, dried
Concept
Semantic Field
The house
Ontological Category
Action/Process
Emoji
🪜
Timeline
Distribution of cognates by language
Geogrpahic distribution of cognates
Cognates and derived terms
- footpace English
- halfpace English
- outpace English
- pace English
- paceline English
- pacemaker English
- pacemaking English
- paceman English
- pacer English
- pacesetter English
- pacesetting English
- paceway English
- pacey English
- pasillo English
- quarterpace English
- repace English
- tachypace English
- peesi Finnish
- *passo, *passāre, *passō Latin
- *passāre Latin
- passalis Latin
- passus Latin
- passāre Latin
- Pass German
- Passus German
- appassire Italian
- bipasso Italian
- contrappasso Italian
- passeggiare Italian
- passire Italian
- passista Italian
- passo Italian
- soprappasso Italian
- pas French
- passer French
- marcapasos Spanish, Castilian
- marcar Spanish, Castilian
- pasillo Spanish, Castilian
- *patno- Proto-Indo-European
- passere Norwegian Bokmål
- passear Portuguese
- pass Swedish
- passus Swedish
- pas Old French
- paŝi Esperanto
- pas Romanian, Moldavian, Moldovan
- paso Cebuano
- passo Old Portuguese
- pas Friulian
- pas Old Occitan
- passari Sicilian
- paso Venetian
- pas xno
- puas Dalmatian
- pass Lombard