different between amiga vs atari

amiga

English

Etymology

From Spanish amiga (female friend).

Noun

amiga (plural amigas)

  1. (Latin American) A female friend.

Related terms

  • amigo

Anagrams

  • agami

Asturian

Noun

amiga f (plural amigues)

  1. female equivalent of amigu

Catalan

Etymology

From Old Occitan, from Latin am?ca.

Pronunciation

  • (Balearic, Central) IPA(key): /??mi.??/
  • (Valencian) IPA(key): /a?mi.?a/
  • Rhymes: -i?a

Noun

amiga f (plural amigues)

  1. female equivalent of amic

Cebuano

Etymology

From Spanish amiga (female friend), from Latin am?ca.

Noun

amiga

  1. a female friend
  2. (obsolete) an address to a female friend

Related terms

  • amigo

Galician

Noun

amiga f (plural amigas)

  1. female equivalent of amigo

Adjective

amiga

  1. feminine singular of amigo

Occitan

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): [a?mi?o]

Noun

amiga f (plural amigas)

  1. female equivalent of amic

Portuguese

Etymology

From Old Portuguese amiga, from Latin am?ca.

Pronunciation

  • (Portugal) IPA(key): /?.?mi.??/
  • (Brazil) IPA(key): /?.?mi.??/

Noun

amiga f (plural amigas)

  1. female equivalent of amigo
  2. (familiar, endearing) a term of address for a female friend; used especially by women

Spanish

Etymology

From Latin am?ca.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /a?mi?a/, [a?mi.??a]

Noun

amiga f (plural amigas, masculine amigo, masculine plural amigos)

  1. female equivalent of amigo, friend

Usage notes

The noun amigo is like most Spanish nouns with a human referent. The masculine forms are used when the referent is known to be male, a group of males, a group of mixed or unknown gender, or an individual of unknown or unspecified gender. The feminine forms are used if the referent is known to be female or a group of females.

Derived terms

amiga From the web:

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atari

English

Etymology

Borrowed from Japanese ???.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /??t????i/

Noun

atari (plural atari or ataris or ataries)

  1. (game of Go) A move that threatens the immediate capture of one or more stones. In chess, the closest equivalent words would be check, where a king is under attack from one or more pieces and pawns, or the state of being en prise, when a piece or pawn is undefended and can be taken without recapture.
    • 1990 May 25: Jonathan Buss, Watanabe vs Buss, moves 15-17, rec.games.go, [1]
      In situations like this, beginners often make the mistake of giving an atari, which strengthens only the opponent.
    • 2003: Peter Shotwell, Go! More Than a Game
      ... White responds with an atari of her own ...
    • 2004: John Fairbairn, Invitation to Go
      The important thing to note is that playing the simple atari first fails ...

Anagrams

  • Arita, Atira, Taira, aarti, arati, atria, raita, riata, taira, tarai, tiara

Basque

Noun

atari inan

  1. gateway, doorway, portal

Finnish

Etymology

Abbreviation of ammatti- ja taparikollisuus.

Noun

atari

  1. (chiefly as modifier in compound terms) professional and habitual crime

Declension

Derived terms

  • atariyksikkö

Anagrams

  • Raita, aarit, atria, itara, raati, raita, ritaa, taari, taira, tiara

Japanese

Romanization

atari

  1. R?maji transcription of ???

Latvian

Verb

atari

  1. 2nd person singular past indicative form of atart

atari From the web:

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  • what atar do i have
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