prato
Portuguese
/ˈpɾa.tu/
noun
Definitions
- plate
- (music) cymbal
Etymology
Derived from Latin *plattus (flat) derived from Ancient Greek πλατύς (flat, broad, wide, smooth) derived from French plat (flat).
Origin
French
plat
Gloss
flat
Concept
Semantic Field
Spatial relations
Ontological Category
Property
Emoji
Timeline
Distribution of cognates by language
Geogrpahic distribution of cognates
Cognates and derived terms
- *platta Latin
- *plattus Latin
- *plattus, *plat(t)us Latin
- fōrma, forma Latin
- platessa Latin
- plattus Latin
- platyrhynchos Latin
- platyrhynchus Latin
- chiatto Italian
- piatto Italian
- monte-plat French
- plafond French
- plat French
- plateau French
- platement French
- platitude French
- platée French
- calientaplatos Spanish, Castilian
- chato Spanish, Castilian
- friegaplatos Spanish, Castilian
- limpiaplatos Spanish, Castilian
- ojiplático Spanish, Castilian
- platija Spanish, Castilian
- platillo Spanish, Castilian
- platito Spanish, Castilian
- plato Spanish, Castilian
- platón Spanish, Castilian
- salvaplatos Spanish, Castilian
- secaplatos Spanish, Castilian
- πλατύς Ancient Greek
- πλᾰτῠ́ς Ancient Greek
- *pleth₂- Proto-Indo-European
- *pléth₂us Proto-Indo-European
- chato Portuguese
- plata Old Norse
- plat Old French
- plat Catalan, Valencian
- परात Hindi
- plat Romanian, Moldavian, Moldovan
- pliat Norman
- plato Tagalog
- plat Middle French
- piat Venetian
- ciàtto Ligurian
- plato Bikol Central
- plöto Tetelcingo Nahuatl
- plato Chavacano
- pulato Jakaltek
- puraatu Cora
- polat Huave
- paatu Annobonese