graça
Portuguese
/ˈɡɾa.sɐ/
noun
Definitions
- grace divine assistance
- grace elegance
- frolic, jocosity, joke
- funniness quality of being funny
- cutie term of endearment referring to a cute person or animal
- (legal) pardon
- (in the plural) thanks
Etymology
Inherited from Old Portuguese graça borrowed from Latin grātia (favour, kindness, favor, esteem).
Origin
Latin
grātia
Gloss
favour, kindness, favor, esteem
Concept
Semantic Field
Emotions and values
Ontological Category
Property
Emoji
Timeline
Distribution of cognates by language
Geogrpahic distribution of cognates
Cognates and derived terms
- begrace English
- bowgrace English
- engrace English
- grace English
- graceful English
- graceless English
- gracen English
- gracer English
- gracesome English
- gracest English
- graceth English
- graceworthy English
- lack-grace English
- misgrace English
- overgrace English
- scapegrace English
- ungrace English
- gratiosus Latin
- grātia Latin
- grātuītus Latin
- grazia Italian
- grazie Italian
- grâce French
- agraciar Spanish, Castilian
- desgracia Spanish, Castilian
- gracia Spanish, Castilian
- *gʷerH- Proto-Indo-European
- desgraça Portuguese
- gracejar Portuguese
- gracejo Portuguese
- grace Middle English
- grace Old French
- graco Esperanto
- gràcia Catalan, Valencian
- grație Romanian, Moldavian, Moldovan
- gracie Middle Dutch
- grasya Tagalog
- graça Old Portuguese
- gracefu Scots
- grasya Quechua
- grasya Hiligaynon
- gratia Interlingua