baté
Catalan
editVerb
editbaté
Champenois
editAlternative forms
editEtymology
editInherited from Old French batel, Old English bat + -el. Cognate with French bateau, Angevin batiau, Bourguignon baiteâ, Picard batiau, Poitevin-Saintongeais batea, Norman baté, Walloon batea, Franco-Provençal batél, Occitan batèl.
Pronunciation
editNoun
editbaté m (plural batés)
- (Troyen) boat
References
edit- Jean Daunay, Parlers de Champagne, 1998
- Baudouin, Glossaire de la forêt de Clairvaux (Ville-sous-la-Ferté), 1887
Crow
editNoun
editbaté
- Alternative spelling of bate
Norman
editEtymology
editFrom Old French batel, from Old English bāt, from Proto-Germanic *baitaz.
Pronunciation
editNoun
editbaté m (plural in France batiâos, plural in Guernsey and Jersey batchieaux)
Derived terms
edit- aûmathe dé baté (“locker, cuddy”)
- baté à cheunm'née, baté à feunmée (“steamer”)
- baté à moteur (“motor boat”)
- baté à nagi (“rowboat”)
- baté à r'clyîn (“clinker-built boat”)
- baté à vaile (“sail boat, yacht, dinghy”)
- baté à vaituthes (“car ferry”)
- baté d'bord, baté d'sauvetage (“lifeboat”)
- baté fraudeur (“smuggling boat”)
- baté pêtcheux (“fishing-boat”)
- batelyi (“boatman”)
- bat'lée (“boatful”)
- bat'ler (“to sail”)
- bat'leux (“boatman”)
- sorti au baté (“to put out to sea”)
Categories:
- Catalan non-lemma forms
- Catalan verb forms
- Champenois terms inherited from Old French
- Champenois terms derived from Old French
- Champenois terms derived from Old English
- Champenois terms suffixed with -el
- Champenois terms with IPA pronunciation
- Champenois lemmas
- Champenois nouns
- Champenois masculine nouns
- Crow lemmas
- Crow nouns
- Norman terms derived from Old French
- Norman terms derived from Old English
- Norman terms derived from Proto-Germanic
- Norman terms with audio pronunciation
- Norman lemmas
- Norman nouns
- Norman masculine nouns
- French Norman
- Guernsey Norman
- Jersey Norman
- nrf:Watercraft