different between cupola vs done
cupola
English
Etymology
Borrowed from Italian cupola, from Latin c?pula (“little tub”); from Latin c?pa, cuppa (“cup”); named for its resemblance to a cup turned over.
Pronunciation
- (UK) IPA(key): /?kju?p?l?/
Noun
cupola (plural cupolas or cupolae)
- (architecture) A dome-shaped ornamental structure located on top of a larger roof or dome.
- (military, railroad) A small turret, usually on a hatch of an armoured fighting vehicle.
- (geology) An upward-projecting mass of plutonic rock extending from a larger batholith.
- (geometry) A solid formed by joining two polygons, one (the base) with twice as many edges as the other, by an alternating band of isosceles triangles and rectangles.
- A type of furnace used for smelting.
- (anatomy) A small cap over a structure that is shaped like a dome or inverted cup.
- the posterior cupola of the cartilaginous nasal capsule
- (railways, Canada, dated) a small viewing window in the top of the caboose for looking over the train, or the part of the caboose where one looks through this window.
Derived terms
- cupolaed
- cupolar
Translations
Further reading
- cupola on Wikipedia.Wikipedia
References
- (etymology) cupola in Webster’s Revised Unabridged Dictionary, G. & C. Merriam, 1913.
Anagrams
- copula, coupla, pocula
Italian
Etymology
From Latin cupula.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /?ku.po.la/
- Rhymes: -upola
Noun
cupola f (plural cupole)
- dome, vault
- cupola
Derived terms
- cupoletta
Descendants
- ? Alemannic German: Chupple
- ? Bulgarian: ????? (kupol)
- ? Catalan: cúpula
- ? Czech: kopule, kupole
- ? Dutch: koepel
- ? English: cupola
- ? Japanese: ????? (ky?pora)
- ? Korean: ??? (kyupolla)
- ? French: coupole
- ? Dutch: coupel, koupel
- ? German: Kuppel
- ? Hungarian: kupola
- ? Macedonian: ?????? (kupola)
- ? Polish: kopu?a
- ? Portuguese: cúpula
- ? Russian: ????? (kupol)
- ? Serbo-Croatian:
- Cyrillic: ??????
- Latin: kupola
- ? Slovak: kupola
- ? Spanish: cúpula
Anagrams
- copula
Further reading
- cupola in Treccani.it – Vocabolario Treccani on line, Istituto dell'Enciclopedia Italiana
cupola From the web:
- what cupola mean in english
- what's cupola in english
- what does cupola mean
- what is cupola furnace
- what size cupola do i need
- what are cupolas used for
- what is cupolas in architecture
- what size cupola for 2 car garage
done
English
Etymology 1
From Middle English don, idon, ?edon, gedon, from Old English d?n, ?ed?n, from Proto-West Germanic *d?n, from Proto-Germanic *d?naz (past participle of *d?n? (“to do”)). Equivalent to do +? -en. Cognate with Scots dune, deen, dene, dane (“done”), Saterland Frisian däin (“done”), West Frisian dien (“done”), Dutch gedaan (“done”), German Low German daan (“done”), German getan (“done”). More at do.
Pronunciation
- (UK) IPA(key): /d?n/, (regional pronunciations) [d?n], [d?n]
- (US) enPR: d?n, IPA(key): /d?n/
- Rhymes: -?n
- Homophones: dun, Donn, Donne, Dunn, Dunne
Adjective
done (comparative more done, superlative most done)
- (of food) Ready, fully cooked.
- Having completed or finished an activity.
- Being exhausted or fully spent.
- Without hope or prospect of completion or success.
- Fashionable, socially acceptable, tasteful.
Synonyms
- (ready, fully cooked):
- (finished an activity): completed, concluded, finished, in the books
- (being exhausted): See also Thesaurus:fatigued
- (without hope of completion): See also Thesaurus:doomed
- (fashionable): See also Thesaurus:fashionable
Derived terms
Translations
Verb
done
- past participle of do
- (nonstandard, dialectal) simple past tense of do; did.
- (Can we date this quote?) Be Still... and Know That I Am God: Devotions for Every Day of the Year
- She opened it up to find a quarter and a note scrawled in childish letters that said, "I done it for love."
- (Can we date this quote?) Be Still... and Know That I Am God: Devotions for Every Day of the Year
- (African-American Vernacular, Southern US, auxiliary verb, taking a past tense) Used in forming the perfective aspect; have.
- 2020, Moneybagg Yo, Thug Cry
- I done made some real bad choices with my life
- 2020, Moneybagg Yo, Thug Cry
- (obsolete) plural simple present of do
- 1579, Edmund Spenser, The Shepheardes Calender
- The while their Foes done each of hem scorn.
- 1606, Nathaniel Baxter, Sir Philip Sydneys Ourania, that is, Endimions Song and Tragedie, containing all Philosophie
- O you Caelestiall ever-living fires,
- That done inflame our hearts with high desires;
- 1647, Henry More, The Praeexistency of the Soul
- The soul of Naboth lies to Ahab told,
- As done the learned Hebrew Doctours write,
- 1579, Edmund Spenser, The Shepheardes Calender
Etymology 2
Alternative forms
- 'done
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /d??n/
Noun
done (uncountable)
- (slang) Clipping of methadone.
- on the done
Anagrams
- Deno, Deon, Endo, NODE, endo, endo-, node, oden, onde, oned
Basque
Adjective
done (not comparable)
- holy
Czech
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /?don?/
- Rhymes: -on?
- Hyphenation: do?ne
Noun
done
- vocative singular of don
Anagrams
- node, onde
Dogrib
Noun
done
- person
Middle English
Etymology 1
From Old French don.
Noun
done
- (rare) gift, present
Etymology 2
Noun
done
- Alternative form of dynne
Spanish
Verb
done
- First-person singular (yo) present subjunctive form of donar.
- Formal second-person singular (usted) present subjunctive form of donar.
- Third-person singular (él, ella, also used with usted?) present subjunctive form of donar.
Venetian
Noun
done
- plural of dona
done From the web:
- what done
- what done in the dark cast
- what done mean
- what does
- what donepezil treat
- what doneness for duck
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