different between bega vs vega
bega
English
Noun
bega (plural begas)
- Alternative form of bigha
Anagrams
- Gabe, beag
Dutch
Pronunciation
Verb
bega
- first-person singular present indicative of begaan
- (archaic) singular present subjunctive of begaan
- imperative of begaan
Italian
Etymology
From Gothic *???????????????? (*b?ga, “quarrel”), ultimately from the root of Proto-Germanic *b?gan?.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /?b?.?a/, /?be.?a/
- Rhymes: -??a, -e?a
- Hyphenation: bè?ga, bé?ga
Noun
bega f (plural beghe)
- quarrel, dispute
- (by extension) A troubled situation.
Derived terms
- begare
References
- bega in Treccani.it – Vocabolario Treccani on line, Istituto dell'Enciclopedia Italiana
Norwegian Bokmål
Alternative forms
- begav
Verb
bega
- simple past of begi
Phuthi
Verb
-bega
- to cut into strips (meat for cooking)
Inflection
This verb needs an inflection-table template.
Slovene
Noun
béga
- inflection of b??g:
- genitive singular
- nominative/accusative dual
Swahili
Pronunciation
Noun
bega (ma class, plural mabega)
- shoulder
bega From the web:
- what began the space race
- what began ww2
- what began the civil war
- what began in the fall of 1930
- what began the panic of 1893
- what began the cold war
- what began ww1
- what began on march 18 1945
vega
English
Etymology 1
From Spanish vega.
Noun
vega (plural vegas)
- (Latin America, Philippines) An open tract of ground; a plain, especially one which is moist and fertile, such as those used for growing tobacco.
Etymology 2
An invented word perhaps chosen to begin with "v" (for "volatility") and to sound as if it could be a Greek letter (like the related parameters "delta", "gamma" etc.)
Noun
vega (plural vegas)
- (finance) A measurement of the sensitivity of the value of an option to changes in the implied volatility of the price of the underlying asset.
- Synonyms: kappa, tau
Hypernyms
- (measure of derivative price sensitivity): Greeks (includes list of coordinate terms)
Anagrams
- EVGA, gave
Catalan
Noun
vega f (plural vegues)
- meadow
- romp in the open air
Dutch
Etymology
Likely from vega-.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /?ve?.?a?/
- Hyphenation: ve?ga
- Rhymes: -e??a?
Noun
vega m (plural vega's)
- (informal) A vegetarian, a veggie.
Icelandic
Etymology
From Old Norse vega (“to weigh”), from Proto-Germanic *wegan? (“to carry, move, weigh”), from Proto-Indo-European *wé??e-, *we??-.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /?v???a/
- Rhymes: -???a
Verb
vega (strong verb, third-person singular past indicative vó, third-person plural past indicative vógu, supine vegið)
- (with accusative) to weigh
- (with accusative) to consider, to ponder, to weigh
- (with accusative) to slay
- Hetjan vó drekann.
- The hero slew the dragon.
- Hetjan vó drekann.
Derived terms
Norwegian Nynorsk
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /²?e???/ (example of pronunciation)
Etymology 1
From Old Norse vega, from Proto-Germanic *wegan? (“to move, carry; to weigh”), from Proto-Indo-European *wé??eti (“to be transporting”), from the root *we??- (“to bring, transport”). Cognates include English weigh.
Alternative forms
- vege (e-infinitive)
Verb
vega (present tense veg, past tense vog, supine vege, past participle vegen, present participle vegande, imperative veg)
- (transitive) to weigh (To determine the weight of an object)
- (intransitive) to weigh (To have a certain weight)
Usage notes
- This is a split infinitive verb.
Derived terms
- avvega
Related terms
- veg m
- vekt f
Etymology 2
From the noun veg m (“way”).
Alternative forms
- vege (e-infinitive)
Verb
vega (present tense vegar, past tense vega, past participle vega, passive infinitive vegast, present participle vegande, imperative veg)
- (transitive, intransitive) to make way
Usage notes
- This is a split infinitive verb.
References
- “vega” in The Nynorsk Dictionary.
Anagrams
- vage
Old Norse
Etymology 1
Noun
vega
- accusative plural of vegr, ‘ways’
- (poetic) earth
- Hvé sú j?rð heitir, / er liggr fyr alda sonum / heimi hverjum í?
- [...] J?rð heitir með m?nnum, / en með Ásum fold, / kalla vega Vanir. — verses 9 and 10 of the Alvíssmál
- How is the earth named, / that which lies before the sons of men, / in each of the worlds?
- [...] "Earth" it is named among men, / but among the Æsir "Field", / the Vanir call it "Ways".
Etymology 2
From Proto-Germanic *wegan? (“to carry, move, weigh”), from Proto-Indo-European *wé??e-, *we??-. Compare Old Saxon wegan, Old High German wegan, and Old English wegan, Old Frisian wega, Gothic ???????????????????? (wigan).
Verb
vega
- to weigh
Conjugation
Descendants
- Danish: veje
- Faroese: viga
- Icelandic: vega
- Norwegian Bokmål: veie
- Norwegian Nynorsk: vega, vege
- Swedish: väga
Etymology 3
From Proto-Germanic *wigan? (“to fight, to battle”), from Proto-Indo-European *weyk- (“to fight”). Cognate with Gothic ???????????????????????? (weihan).
Verb
vega
- to fight
- c. 1000 AD, inscription on the Sjörup runestone
- c. 1000 AD, inscription on the Sjörup runestone
Conjugation
Past first/third singular vá.
Descendants
- Icelandic: vega
- Old Swedish: vægha
References
- vega in Geir T. Zoëga (1910) A Concise Dictionary of Old Icelandic, Oxford: Clarendon Press
Spanish
Etymology
From Old Spanish vayca, from Old Basque *bai-ko (“river plain, water meadow”); akin to Basque ibaiki (“riverbank”), from ibai (“river”).
Noun
vega f (plural vegas)
- meadow
- fertile lowland
- grassy plain
- valley (the fertile lowlands surrounding a river)
- alluvial plain
- (Carribean) tobacco plantation
See also
- Las Vegas
- Vega
vega From the web:
- what vegan
- what vegas shows are open
- what vegas buffets are open
- what vegan means
- what vegan foods have protein
- what vegas hotels have balconies
- what vegan foods have b12
- what vegan foods have iron
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