different between lais vs labs
lais
English
Noun
lais
- plural of lai
Anagrams
- Alis, Isla, LIAs, LISA, Lias, Lisa, SAIL, SiAl, ails, lias, sail, sial
French
Pronunciation
- Rhymes: -?
Noun
lais m
- plural of lai
Galician
Etymology
From Old French lai (“song”), which have either a Germanic (confer Old High German leih, "a play, skit, melody, song") or Celtic origin (Old Irish laíd, "poem").
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /?lajs/
Noun
lais m (plural laises)
- (archaic) song
Derived terms
- laiar
- salaiar
References
- “lais” in Dicionario de Dicionarios do galego medieval, SLI - ILGA 2006-2012.
- “lais” in Xavier Varela Barreiro & Xavier Gómez Guinovart: Corpus Xelmírez - Corpus lingüístico da Galicia medieval. SLI / Grupo TALG / ILG, 2006-2016.
- “lais” in Tesouro informatizado da lingua galega. Santiago: ILG.
Gothic
Romanization
lais
- Romanization of ????????????????
Welsh
Noun
lais
- Soft mutation of llais.
Mutation
lais From the web:
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- what laissez faire
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- what laissez-faire economics means
- what's laissez-faire in english
- laisse meaning
- what laissez-faire means in french
labs
English
Noun
labs
- plural of lab
Anagrams
- B.L.A.S., BALs, BASL, BLAs, albs, slab
Danish
Noun
labs c
- indefinite genitive singular of lab
Dutch
Pronunciation
Noun
labs
- Plural form of lab
Latvian
Etymology
From Proto-Baltic *labas, from Proto-Indo-European *lab?- (“to seize, to grab”). The semantic development was apparently “seized, grabbed, taken” > “obtained, acquired (as property)” > “valuable, precious” > “good.” Cognates include Lithuanian lãbas (“good; hello”), lobùs (“well-off, rich”), Old Prussian labs (“good”), Sanskrit ???? (lábhate, “to seize, to gain possession, to find, to have”), Ancient Greek ??????? (láph?ron, “booty, loot, plunder; gain, benefit”).
Pronunciation
Adjective
labs (definite labais, comparative lab?ks, superlative vislab?kais, adverb labi)
- good ((of people) following accepted moral rules, treating others in a sensitive, kind, friendly way; (of their actions) typical of such people)
- cilv?ks, kam t?k rozes un kas priec?jas par b?rniem, ir labs cilv?ks — a person who likes roses and enjoys children is a good person
- good ((of people) among whom there is harmony, understanding, friendly relations; (of their actions, relations) typical of such people)
- (of animals) good, tame, peaceful
- (of people) good (who carry out their duties skillfully, conscientiously)
- good (appropriately fulfilling or corresponding to certain requirements or expectations; pleasant, causing pleasure)
- (of the body, its parts and functions) good (performing its functions appropriately, developing normally, as expected)
- good (relatively large, long, above average; (of time periods) complete, full)
- atn?kt lab? tums? — to arrive in good darkness (= well after dark, after nightfall)
- (in the locative singular as a postposition, with genitive complement) for the good of, for the benefit of
- (usually definite forms) right, right-hand side
Declension
Antonyms
- (of "good"): slikts (“bad”), ?auns (“evil”)
- (of "right"): kreiss (“left”)
Derived terms
- labdien, labr?t, labvakar
- lab?js
- labums
References
Spanish
Noun
labs m pl
- plural of lab
labs From the web:
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- what labs to monitor for heparin