different between sade vs sadet

sade

English

Etymology 1

From Middle English saden (to weary, become weary or satisfied), from Old English sadian (to satisfy, satiate, fill, be sated, become wearied), from Proto-Germanic *sad?n? (to satiate, become satisfied), from Proto-Germanic *sadaz (sated), from Proto-Indo-European *seh?- (to satiate, be satisfied). Doublet of sate, a later variant; also cognate with English sad.

Verb

sade (third-person singular simple present sades, present participle sading, simple past and past participle saded)

  1. (dialect) To tire, weary.

Etymology 2

Noun

sade (plural sades)

  1. Alternative spelling of sadhe

Anagrams

  • 'eads, AEDs, Ades, Desa, ESAD, Eads, Seda, ades, deas

Finnish

(index sa)

Etymology

From Proto-Finnic *sadek. Equivalent to sataa +? -e.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /?s?de?/, [?s??de?(?)]
  • Rhymes: -?de
  • Syllabification: sa?de

Noun

sade

  1. (meteorology) precipitation (any kind of precipitation from the sky (e.g. rain, snow, sleet, hailstones))
    Sateet tulivat tänä vuonna myöhään..
    The rains came late that year.
    1. (especially) rain (condensed water falling from a cloud)
  2. (by extension) rain (any matter moving or falling, usually through air)
    Kranaattisade putosi asemiimme.
    A rain of mortar fire fell on our positions.

Usage notes

Snowfall, hailstorm etc. are also sade in Finnish, but are normally used with a modifier, e.g. lumisade (snowing, snowfall), raesade (hailstorm). It is also possible to use a modifier for rain specifically: vesisade.

Declension

Derived terms

  • adjectives: sateeton, sateinen
  • verbs: sataa, sadettaa
Compounds

Related terms

  • sataa
  • sato

See also

  • kuuro

Slovak

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): [?sade]

Noun

sade m

  1. locative singular of sad

Swedish

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /?s??d?/

Verb

sade (contracted sa)

  1. past tense of säga.

Turkish

Etymology

From Persian ????? (sâde).

Adjective

sade

  1. plain

Synonyms

  • yal?n

sade From the web:

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sadet

English

Alternative forms

  • sadete

Etymology

From French sadète, apparently from Lao.

Noun

sadet (plural sadets)

  1. A type of spiritual leader or witch doctor among the Jarai people of Southeast Asia.
    • c. 1919, Encyclopaedia of Religion and Ethics, vol VII:
      The sadete who is most feared is the fire sadete, known especially by the savages of the Assamese slope; the water sadete exercises a less perceptible sway over the Laotian slope; the power of the wind sadete seems insignificant.
    • 1951, Norman Lewis, A Dragon Apparent, Eland 2003, p. 121:
      At Cêo-Rêo, not far from Buon Choah, are located the villages of those enigmatic personages, the Sadets, of Fire and Water, whose fearsome reputation is widespread throughout Indo-China.

Anagrams

  • AEDST, Deats, Stade, Stead, TASed, asdet, dates, desat, sated, stade, stead, tased, tsade

sadet From the web:

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  • safety data sheet
  • food safety
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