different between teh vs tee

teh

English

Etymology

Mistyping of the on a computer keyboard.

Pronunciation

  • enPR: t?, IPA(key): /t?/

Article

teh

  1. (Internet slang) Deliberate misspelling of the, for humorous, sarcastic or facetious effect.
    This is teh game for your new box!
    You are teh haxor!

Usage notes

  • Teh is sometimes used in deliberately ungrammatical ways compared to the word the. For example, teh can be applied to adjectives; "He is teh stupid" is an acceptable sentence within the universe of teh usage, whereas ordinarily "He is the stupid" is not.

Anagrams

  • -eth, ETH, Eth, Eth., HET, eth, eth-, het, the, the-

Albanian

Etymology

A prefixed derivative of eh.

Noun

teh m (indefinite plural teha, definite singular teha, definite plural tehat)

  1. blade
Related terms
  • eh

Bahnar

Etymology

From Proto-Bahnaric *t(n)?h, from Proto-Mon-Khmer *t?i? ~ *t?ih ~ *t?i?h (earth, ground); cognate with Koho tiah (earth, ground), Mon ?? (t?e?, earth, ground, land), Khmer ?? (d?y, earth, ground, land), Semai tiiq (earth, ground, soil).

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /t?h/

Noun

teh

  1. earth, ground
  2. dirt

Classical Nahuatl

Alternative forms

  • te

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /te?/

Pronoun

teh

  1. (emphatic) you (singular), thou

Synonyms

  • tehhuatl

Indonesian

Etymology

From Malay teh (tea), from Min Nan ? () (Amoy dialect)

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /?t?h/
  • Hyphenation: tèh

Noun

tèh (first-person possessive tehku, second-person possessive tehmu, third-person possessive tehnya)

  1. tea

Derived terms

Further reading

  • “teh” in Kamus Besar Bahasa Indonesia (KBBI) Daring, Jakarta: Badan Pengembangan dan Pembinaan Bahasa, Kementerian Pendidikan dan Kebudayaan Republik Indonesia, 2016.

Malay

Etymology

From Min Nan ? () (Amoy dialect)

Noun

teh (Jawi spelling ????, informal 1st possessive tehku, impolite 2nd possessive tehmu, 3rd possessive tehnya)

  1. tea

Synonyms

  • ca

Derived terms

  • teh tarik

Descendants

  • Indonesian: teh
  • ? Dutch: thee
    • Afrikaans: tee
    • ? West Frisian: tee
    • ? Dutch Low Saxon: thee
    • ? Danish: te
      • ? Faroese: te
    • ? English: tea
      • Gullah: tea
      • Jamaican Creole: tea
      • ? Abenaki: ti
      • ? Chickasaw: tii'
      • ? Cocopa: ?i·
      • ? Cornish:
      • ? Cree:
        Canadian syllabics: ?? (tiy)
        Latin: tiy
      • ? Inuktitut: ? (tii)
      • ? Irish: tae
      • ? Maori: t?
      • ? Malecite-Passamaquoddy: ti
      • ? Mikasuki: ti'g'tlo'q, ji'gitlo'q (kettle) (from "tea kettle")
      • ? Panamint: tii
      • ? Telugu: ?? (??)
      • ? Unami: ti
      • ? Welsh: te
    • ? French: thé
      • Haitian Creole: te
      • Louisiana Creole French: thé
      • ? Armenian: ??? (t?ey)
      • ? Coeur d'Alene: liiti
      • ? Corsican:
      • ? Greek: ????? (téïon) (with neuter suffix -ion)
      • ? Italian:
        • ? Romansch: te, ,
      • ? Norman: thée
      • ? Occitan:
      • ? Romansch: te, ,
      • ? South Slavey: lidí
      • ? Tiri: tee
      • ? Walloon:
    • ? German: Tee
      • ? German Low German: Tee
        • Plautdietsch: Tee
      • ? Estonian: tee
      • ? Hunsrik: Tee
      • ? Lower Sorbian: tej
      • ? Romansch: te, ,
      • ? Saterland Frisian: Tee
      • ? Silesian: tyj
        • ? Slovene: te (dialectal)
      • ? Silesian German: Tee
      • ? Vilamovian: tyy
      • ? Zipser German: Tee
    • ? Icelandic: te
    • ? New Latin: thea
      • ? Latin: herba thea (herb tea)
        • ? Polish: herbata
          • ? Belarusian: ???????? (harbáta)
          • ? Kashubian: arbata, rabata, erbata, rebata
          • ? Lithuanian: arbata
          • ? Samogitian: erbeta
          • ? Ukrainian: ???????? (herbáta), ????????? (herbátka)
    • ? Latvian: t?ja
    • ? Norwegian: te
    • ? Sranan Tongo: te
    • ? Swedish: te, the, thé
      • ? Finnish: tee

Min Nan


Slavey

Noun

teh

  1. water

References

  • Keren Rice, A grammar of Slave (1989)

teh From the web:

  • what the
  • what the font
  • what the weather
  • what tehe mean
  • what the health
  • what tehsil is dha karachi
  • what the hell
  • what the world needs now


tee

English

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /ti?/
  • Rhymes: -i?
  • Homophones: T, te, tea, ti

Etymology 1

From Middle English [Term?], from Old English te, from Latin te (the name of the letter T).

Noun

tee (plural tees)

  1. The name of the Latin-script letter T.
    • 1985, Stephen King, Paranoid: A Chant
      They have writing samples and examine the back loops of pees and the crosses of tees.
  2. Something shaped like the letter T.
    Hyponyms: tee-shirt, tee-beam, tee-frame, tee-iron, tee-headed
  3. (clothing) T-shirt.

Derived terms

  • teevee

Translations

See also

  • (Latin-script letter names) letter; a, bee, cee, dee, e, ef, gee, aitch, i, jay, kay, el, em, en, o, pee, cue, ar, ess, tee, u, vee, double-u, ex, wye, zee / zed

Etymology 2

From Middle English teen, from Old English t?on (to pull, tug, draw, drag, entice, allure, induce, lead, bring, rear, educate, attract, arrogate, bring forth, produce, restrain, betake oneself to, go, roam), from Proto-West Germanic *teuhan (to pull, lead), from Proto-Germanic *teuhan? (to draw, lead, bring, pull, help), from Proto-Indo-European *dewk- (to pull, lead).

Verb

tee (third-person singular simple present tees, present participle teeing, simple past teed or tow, past participle teed or town)

  1. (transitive, obsolete) To draw; lead.
  2. (intransitive, obsolete) To draw away; go; proceed.

Related terms

  • betee
  • fortee
  • tow
  • tug
  • wanton

Etymology 3

First attested in the 17th century as teaz, later reanalyzed as a plural.

Noun

tee (plural tees)

  1. (golf) A flat area of ground from which players hit their first shots on a golf hole.
  2. (sports) A usually wooden or plastic peg from which a ball is kicked or hit.
  3. (curling) The target area of a curling rink
  4. The mark at which players aim in quoits.

Derived terms

  • tee ball
  • tee off
  • tee on
  • tee up

Translations

Verb

tee (third-person singular simple present tees, present participle teeing, simple past and past participle teed)

  1. (golf) To place a ball on a tee
Synonyms
  • tee up

References

Etymology 4

Noun

tee (plural tees)

  1. A finial resembling an umbrella, crowning a dagoba in Indochinese countries.

Anagrams

  • EET

Afrikaans

Etymology

From Dutch thee.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /t???/

Noun

tee (uncountable)

  1. tea

Derived terms

  • rooibostee
  • teekoppie

Estonian

Etymology 1

From Proto-Finnic *tee. Cognate with Finnish tie.

Noun

tee (genitive tee, partitive teed)

  1. road, way
Declension
Derived terms
  • kiirtee
  • maantee
  • raudtee
  • umbtee

Etymology 2

From German Tee, ultimately from Min Nan ? ().

Noun

tee (genitive tee, partitive teed)

  1. tea
Declension
Derived terms
  • liivatee

Etymology 3

Noun

tee (genitive [please provide], partitive [please provide])

  1. The name of the Latin-script letter T.

Etymology 4

Verb

tee

  1. Second-person singular imperative form of tegema.
  2. Present connegative form of tegema.

Finnish

Etymology 1

Borrowed from Swedish te, from Dutch thee, from Min Nan ? () (Amoy dialect), from Old Chinese, ultimately from Proto-Sino-Tibetan *s-la (leaf, tea).

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /?te?/, [?t?e??]
  • Rhymes: -e?
  • Syllabification: tee

Noun

tee

  1. (uncountable) tea (dried leaves or buds of the tea plant, Camellia sinensis)
    Mene kauppaan ja osta teetä.
    Go to the supermarket and buy some tea.
  2. (uncountable) tea (drink made by infusing these dried leaves or buds in hot water)
    Haluaisitko teetä?
    Would you like some tea?
  3. (countable) tea (variety of the tea plant)
    Darjeeling on intialainen tee.
    Darjeeling is a tea from India.
  4. (uncountable, by extension) tea (any drink made by infusing parts of various other plants)
    yrttitee, kamomillatee, minttutee
    herb tea, camomile tea, mint tea
  5. (countable) tea, cup of tea (cup of any one of these drinks)
Usage notes

As the plural forms are quite rarely used and as they, with the exception of nominative, look the same as the plural forms of tie (road), it may be advisable to substitute a synonym for the word tee in those cases.

Declension
Synonyms
  • (drink made of Camella sinensis): saikka, tsaju, tsaiju (dialectal)
  • (variety of the tea plant): teelaatu
  • (cup of tea): teekupillinen, kuppi teetä
Derived terms

Etymology 2

From Latin t?.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /?te?/, [?t?e??]
  • Rhymes: -e?
  • Syllabification: tee

Noun

tee

  1. The name of the Latin-script letter T.
Declension

Etymology 3

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /?te??/, [?t?e??(?)]
  • Rhymes: -e?
  • Syllabification: tee

Verb

tee

  1. Present indicative connegative form of tehdä.
  2. Second-person singular imperative form of tehdä.
  3. Second-person singular imperative connegative form of tehdä.

Anagrams

  • eet

Ingrian

Etymology

From Proto-Finnic *tee, from Proto-Finno-Permic *teje. Cognates include Finnish tie and Estonian tee.

Pronunciation

  • (Ala-Laukaa, Hevaha, Soikkola) IPA(key): /?te?/
    • (Saarve) IPA(key): /?ti?/ (phonemic spelling: tii)
  • (Ylä-Laukaa) IPA(key): /?ti?/ (phonemic spelling: tii)
  • Hyphenation: tee

Noun

tee (genitive teen, partitive teetä)

  1. way
  2. path

Declension

References

  • V. I. Junus (1936) I?oran Keelen Grammatikka?[3], Leningrad: Riikin Ucebno-pedagogiceskoi Izdateljstva, page 66
  • Ruben E. Nirvi (1971) Inkeroismurteiden Sanakirja, Helsinki: Suomalais-Ugrilainen Seura, page 583
  • Vitalij Chernyavskij (2005) Ižoran keel (Ittseopastaja)?[4], page 171

Middle Dutch

Etymology

From Old Dutch *t?a, from Proto-Germanic *taihw?.

Noun

têe f

  1. toe

Inflection

This noun needs an inflection-table template.

Descendants

  • Dutch: teen (plural reanalysed as singular)
  • Limburgish: tieën (plural reanalysed as singular)

Further reading

  • “tee”, in Vroegmiddelnederlands Woordenboek, 2000
  • Verwijs, E.; Verdam, J. (1885–1929) , “tee”, in Middelnederlandsch Woordenboek, The Hague: Martinus Nijhoff, ?ISBN

Norwegian Bokmål

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /i?/
  • Rhymes: -i?
  • Homophone: ti

Etymology

From English tee.

Noun

tee m (definite singular tee-en, indefinite plural tee-er, definite plural tee-ene)

  1. (golf) tee
  2. (golf) peg

References

  • “tee” in The Bokmål Dictionary.

Norwegian Nynorsk

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /i?/
  • Rhymes: -i?
  • Homophone: ti

Etymology

From English tee.

Noun

tee m (definite singular tee-en, indefinite plural tee-ar, definite plural tee-ane)

  1. (golf) tee
  2. (golf) peg

References

  • “tee” in The Nynorsk Dictionary.

Anagrams

  • ete

Old Irish

Adjective

teë

  1. Alternative spelling of

Mutation


Tetum

Verb

tee

  1. to defecate

Tiri

Noun

tee

  1. tea

References

  • Midori Osumi, Tinrin Grammar

Votic

Etymology

From Proto-Finnic *tee.

Noun

tee (genitive tee, partitive [please provide])

  1. way, road

Inflection

This noun needs an inflection-table template.

References

  • "tee" in Vadja keele sõnaraamat

Võro

Noun

tee (genitive [please provide], partitive [please provide])

  1. The name of the Latin-script letter T.

Inflection

This noun needs an inflection-table template.


West Frisian

Etymology

Borrowing from Dutch thee, from Malay teh, from Min Nan ? ().

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /te?/

Noun

tee c (no plural)

  1. tea

Further reading

  • “tee”, in Wurdboek fan de Fryske taal (in Dutch), 2011

tee From the web:

  • what teeth do kids lose
  • what teens want for christmas
  • what teeth come in first
  • what teeth do you lose
  • what teeth do puppies lose
  • what teeth are you supposed to lose
  • what teeth do kids lose first
  • what teen wolf character am i
+1
Share
Pin
Like
Send
Share

you may also like