liet
التعريفات والمعاني
== Dutch ==
=== Pronunciation ===
Rhymes: -it
Homophone: lied
=== Verb ===
liet
singular past indicative of laten
=== Anagrams ===
lite
== Latin ==
=== Verb ===
līet
third-person singular present active subjunctive of līō
== Latvian ==
=== Etymology ===
Proto-Balto-Slavic *leˀitei, from Proto-Indo-European *ley-, *lī- (“to pour, to flow, to drip”).
=== Pronunciation ===
IPA(key): [ˈliɛ̂t]
=== Verb ===
liêt (transitive, 1st conjugation, present leju, lej, lej, past lēju)
to pour
to water
to cast (metal)
==== Conjugation ====
== Middle High German ==
=== Etymology ===
Inherited from Old High German liod, from Proto-West Germanic *leuþ.
=== Pronunciation ===
IPA(key): (before 13th CE) /ˈliə̯t/
=== Noun ===
liet n
stanza
(in the plural) song
==== Declension ====
==== Descendants ====
German: Lied
→ English: lied
→ Finnish: lied
→ French: lied
→ Romanian: lied
Hunsrik: Lied
Luxembourgish: Lidd
Vilamovian: łid
Yiddish: ליד (lid)
=== References ===
Benecke, Georg Friedrich; Müller, Wilhelm; Zarncke, Friedrich (1863), “liet”, in Mittelhochdeutsches Wörterbuch: mit Benutzung des Nachlasses von Benecke, Stuttgart: S. Hirzel
== Norman ==
=== Alternative forms ===
llit, lit (continental Normandy)
lliet (Guernsey)
llet (Guernsey, continental Normandy)
lyet (Sark)
=== Etymology ===
From Old French lit, from Latin lectus (“bed”).
=== Pronunciation ===
=== Noun ===
liet m (plural liets)
(Jersey) bed
==== Derived terms ====
bouais d'liet (“bedstead”)
liet d'mort (“deathbed”)
liet d'pathai (“bunk”)
== Slovak ==
=== Noun ===
liet
genitive plural of leto
== West Frisian ==
=== Etymology ===
From Old Frisian *liāth, from Proto-Germanic *leuþą.
=== Pronunciation ===
IPA(key): /liə̯t/
=== Noun ===
liet n (plural lieten, diminutive lietsje)
song
==== Further reading ====
“liet”, in Wurdboek fan de Fryske taal (in Dutch), 2011