different between type vs taga

type

English

Etymology

From Middle English type (symbol, figure, emblem), from Latin typus, from Ancient Greek ????? (túpos, mark, impression, type), from ????? (túpt?, I strike, beat).

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /ta?p/
  • Rhymes: -a?p

Noun

type (plural types)

  1. A grouping based on shared characteristics; a class.
  2. An individual considered typical of its class, one regarded as typifying a certain profession, environment, etc.
  3. An individual that represents the ideal for its class; an embodiment.
    • 1872, Mary Rose Godfrey, Loyal, volume 3, page 116:
      Altogether he was the type of low ruffianism — as ill-conditioned a looking brute as ever ginned a hare.
  4. (printing, countable) A letter or character used for printing, historically a cast or engraved block.
    1. (uncountable) Such types collectively, or a set of type of one font or size.
    2. (chiefly uncountable) Text printed with such type, or imitating its characteristics.
      The headline was set in bold type.
  5. (taxonomy) Something, often a specimen, selected as an objective anchor to connect a scientific name to a taxon; this need not be representative or typical.
  6. Preferred sort of person; sort of person that one is attracted to.
  7. (medicine) A blood group.
  8. (corpus linguistics) A word that occurs in a text or corpus irrespective of how many times it occurs, as opposed to a token.
  9. (theology) An event or person that prefigures or foreshadows a later event - commonly an Old Testament event linked to Christian times.
  10. (computing theory) A tag attached to variables and values used in determining which kinds of value can be used in which situations; a data type.
  11. (fine arts) The original object, or class of objects, scene, face, or conception, which becomes the subject of a copy; especially, the design on the face of a medal or a coin.
  12. (chemistry) A simple compound, used as a mode or pattern to which other compounds are conveniently regarded as being related, and from which they may be actually or theoretically derived.
    The fundamental types used to express the simplest and most essential chemical relations are hydrochloric acid, water, ammonia, and methane.
  13. (mathematics) A part of the partition of the object domain of a logical theory (which due to the existence of such partition, would be called a typed theory). (Note: this corresponds to the notion of "data type" in computing theory.)
    • 2011, V.N. Grishin (originator), "Types, theory of", in Encyclopedia of Mathematics. URL: http://www.encyclopediaofmath.org/index.php?title=Types,_theory_of&oldid=14150
      Logics of the second and higher orders may be regarded as type-theoretic systems.

Synonyms

  • (grouping based on shared characteristics): category, class, genre, group, kind, nature, sort, stripe, tribe
  • (computing theory): data type
  • (printing): sort
  • (mathematics): sort
  • See also Thesaurus:class

Hyponyms

Derived terms

Descendants

  • ? Japanese: ???
  • ? Korean: ?? (taip)

Translations

Verb

type (third-person singular simple present types, present participle typing, simple past and past participle typed)

  1. To put text on paper using a typewriter.
  2. To enter text or commands into a computer using a keyboard.
  3. To determine the blood type of.
  4. To represent by a type, model, or symbol beforehand; to prefigure.
  5. To furnish an expression or copy of; to represent; to typify.
    • Let us type them now in our own lives.
  6. To categorize into types.

Derived terms

Descendants

  • Esperanto: tajpi

Translations

References

  • type at OneLook Dictionary Search

Anagrams

  • pyet

Dutch

Etymology

From Latin typus, from Ancient Greek ????? (túpos, mark, impression, type), from ????? (túpt?, I strike, beat).

Pronunciation

  • Hyphenation: ty?pe

Noun

type n (plural types or typen, diminutive typetje n)

  1. type: a class, someone or something from a class. The diminutive is used when made into a caricature.

Derived terms

  • woningtype

Descendants

  • ? Indonesian: tipe

Verb

type

  1. (archaic) singular present subjunctive of typen

French

Etymology

Borrowed from Ecclesiastical Latin typus, from Ancient Greek ????? (túpos).

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /tip/

Noun

type m (plural types)

  1. type; sort, kind
  2. (colloquial) guy, bloke, man
  3. (typography) typeface

Descendants

  • ? Polish: typ
  • ? Romanian: tip

Adjective

type (plural types)

  1. typical, normal, classic
  2. (statistics) standard

Further reading

  • “type” in Trésor de la langue française informatisé (The Digitized Treasury of the French Language).

Latin

Noun

type

  1. vocative singular of typus

Norwegian Bokmål

Etymology

From Ancient Greek ????? (túpos).

Noun

type m (definite singular typen, indefinite plural typer, definite plural typene)

  1. a type (kind, sort)
  2. typeface
  3. (slang) a male person, a boy or man
  4. (slang) someone's boyfriend

References

  • “type” in The Bokmål Dictionary.

Norwegian Nynorsk

Etymology

From Ancient Greek ????? (túpos).

Noun

type m (definite singular typen, indefinite plural typar, definite plural typane)

  1. a type (kind, sort)

References

  • “type” in The Nynorsk Dictionary.

type From the web:

  • what type of wave is a sound wave
  • what type of government is the us
  • what type of star is the sun
  • what type of rock is marble
  • what type of fish is dory
  • what type of animal is goofy
  • what type of vaccine is johnson and johnson
  • what type of car is lightning mcqueen


taga

Breton

Verb

taga

  1. to attack

Cebuano

Pronunciation 1

  • (General Cebuano) IPA(key): /t?a?a/
  • Rhymes: -a
  • Hyphenation: ta?ga

Adverb

taga

  1. (preceding a place) from or denoting residency in or around a place, district, area, or region
  2. (preceding a proper noun) denoting a resident or inhabitant of (the place denoted by the proper noun)

Pronunciation 2

  • (General Cebuano) IPA(key): /?t?a??a/
  • Rhymes: -a
  • Hyphenation: ta?ga

Verb

taga

  1. to give

Pronunciation 3

  • (General Cebuano) IPA(key): /t?a?a?/
  • Rhymes: -a?
  • Hyphenation: ta?ga

Noun

taga

  1. a fishhook

Verb

taga

  1. to fish or catch with a hook

Estonian

Etymology

From Proto-Finnic *taka, from Proto-Uralic *taka. Cognate to Finnish takana, Veps taga, Northern Sami duohki, Tundra Nenets [script needed] (?a??n?, away, at the back, earlier), Forest Enets [Term?] (tehone, at the back), Selkup [script needed] (t?k, at the back), and Kamassian [script needed] (takk??n, behind).

Adverb

taga

  1. at the back
  2. attached (at the back)

Postposition

taga

  1. behind (Governs the genitive)

Derived terms

  • tagasi
  • takka
  • taha
  • taas
  • taamal
  • taandama
  • tagasõna

Fijian

Noun

taga

  1. bag

Hausa

Etymology

Borrowed from Kanuri tágà, from Arabic ??????? (??qa).

Pronunciation

  • Hyphenation: t??g??

Noun

t?g?? f (plural t?g?g?, possessed form t?gàr?)

  1. window

References

  • Hausa vocabulary. In: Haspelmath, M. & Tadmor, U. (eds.) World Loanword Database. Leipzig: Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology.

Irish

Alternative forms

  • teaga (parts of Connacht)
  • tige (Ulster, parts of Munster)

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /?t??a??/

Verb

taga

  1. present subjunctive analytic of tar
    • 1984, Leabhar Urnaí Malairt Leagain 1984 de réir nósanna Eaglais na hÉireann, p. 62:
      Ár nAthair atá ar neamh,
      go naofar d’ainm,
      go dtaga do ríocht,
      go ndéantar do thoil
      ar talamh mar a dhéantar ar neamh.
      Our Father who art in heaven,
      hallowed by thy name,
      thy kingdom come,
      thy will be done
      on earth as it is in heaven.

Mutation


Japanese

Romanization

taga

  1. R?maji transcription of ??

Sambali

Noun

tagâ

  1. fishhook

Swahili

Pronunciation

Verb

-taga (infinitive kutaga)

  1. to lay (eggs)

Inflection


Swedish

Verb

taga (present tager, preterite tog, supine tagit, imperative tag)

  1. Dated form of ta.

Conjugation

Anagrams

  • agat, gata

Tagalog

Noun

tagâ

  1. stab marks

Preposition

taga

  1. from

Anagrams

  • gata

Veps

Etymology

From Proto-Finnic *taka.

Postposition

taga

  1. behind, in behind, at the back of (stationary location)

References

  • Zajceva, N. G.; Mullonen, M. I. (2007) , “??”, in Uz’ venä-vepsläine vajehnik / Novyj russko-vepsskij slovar? [New Russian–Veps Dictionary], Petrozavodsk: Periodika

Westrobothnian

Etymology

From Old Norse taka, from Proto-Germanic *t?kan?.

Verb

taga (preterite to or tåo, supine täje or taje or töje or toi or , middle tagas)

  1. (transitive) To take.

Related terms

  • tag
  • tak
  • tâ rett
  • tagas

See also

  • naamm
  • laabb

taga From the web:

  • what tagalog
  • what tagamet is used for
  • what tagalog language
  • what tagalog means
  • what tagalog translation
  • what tagalog in english
  • what tagalog words are spanish
  • what tagalog sounds like to foreigners
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