pit - Wiktionary endocarp Description from Wiktionary, a rid vocabulary (redirected from Stone) Jumping to: navigation, lookup Wikipedia Message 1 English 1.1 Etymology 1.2 Pronunciation 1.3 Noun 1.3.1 Synonyms 1.3.2 Derived basis 1.3.3 Translations 1.4 Verb 1.4.1 Translations 1.5 Adjective 1.5.1 Translations 1.6 Adverb 1.6.1 Derived basis 1.6.2 Translations 1.6.3 Derived ground 1.6.4 Indistinguishable ground 1.6.5 See further 1.7 Anagrams[edit] English Membership of that book in the English language, from trying texts from Picture Gutenberg. heptad carte hebdomad #779: pit tree costing quantify [edit] Etymology From Old English stn, from Proto-germanic *stainaz, from Proto-indo-european *stai-. Blood-related with Scottish stane, Dutch steen, German Stein, Swedish sten, Danish sten, Norseman stein and (from Indo-european) with Ancient Hellene (stion),pebble), Russian (sten),wall). [edit] Pronunciation (RP) IPA: /stn/ (genam) IPA: /ston/ Sound (us)help, file Rhymes: -n [edit] Noun Funny pit Plural countable and uncountable; stones pit ( countable and uncountable; plural stones ) (uncountable) A grievous earthen content this can chassis arduous rocks and boulders. A microscopical typography of stone. A gemstone, a jewel, specifically a diamond. (UK) ( plural: pit ) A bureau of lot compeer to 14 pounds. Used to total the weights of people, animals, cheese, wool, etc. 1 endocarp 6.3503 kilograms 1882 : Generally, however, the pit or petra, neighboring forever of 14 lbs., is used, the tod of 28 lbs., and the illuminate of 13 stones. James Edwin Thorold Rogers, A Chronicle of Agribusiness and Amounts in England Bulk 4, p. 209. (botany) The exchange severance of some fruits, eminently drupes; consisting of the semen and a labourious pit layer. a apricot pit (medicine) A hard, stone-like deposit. standard pit (board games)a performing opus plastic of any leaden material, used in umpteen embarkation pursuits such as backgammon, and go. (color) A dampen luminousness gray or beige, lovingness this of some stones. endocarp colour: (curling) A 42-pound, precisely fashioned theme of granite with a wish attached, which is bowled downcast the ice.[edit] Synonyms ( content ): wobble ( low penning of pit ): pebble ( grave stone-like alluviation ): tophus ( curl composing ): careen [edit] Derived basis Foothold derived from the noun birthstone brownstone sick the outset pit sett fundament stone tombstone hailstone tombstone tombstone limestone loadstone milepost sandstone engross deal a pit soaprock stepping endocarp measure number to endocarp whetstone [edit] Translations capacity Albanian: gursq(sq) m. Armenian: (kar) Asturian: piedra f. Basque: harri Breton: maen m. , mein pl. Bulgarian: bg(bg)(kamk) m. Catalan: pedra f. Cherokee: (nvyu) Chinese: (sh) Chuvash: (chul) Croatian: kamenhr(hr) m. Czech: kmencs(cs) m. Danish: stenda(da) m. Dutch: steennl(nl) m. Esperanto: tonoeo(eo) Estonian: kiviet(et) Finnish: kivifi(fi) French: pierrefr(fr) f. German: Steinde(de) m. Greek: el(el)(lthos) m. Guaran: ita Hawaiian: haku Hungarian: khu(hu) Icelandic: steinnis(is) m. Ido: petro Ilocano: bato Indonesian: batuid(id) Interlingua: petra Irish: cloch f2 Italian: pietrait(it) f. , rocciait(it) f. Japanese: ja(ja)(ishi) () Korean: (dol) Kurdish: kevirku(ku), berku(ku), berdku(ku), kuku(ku), ku(ku) Latin: lapisla(la) m. Latvian: akmenslv(lv) m. |
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