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dut
From Wiktionary, the free dictionary
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See also: Appendix:Variations of "dut"
Translingual
Etymology
Symbol
dut
See also
English
Etymology
(This etymology is missing or incomplete. Please add to it, or discuss it at the Etymology scriptorium.)
Noun
dut (plural duts)
- (Hartlepool, Geordie) A snug woolly hat.
- 1986, Luke Davis, How to talk proper:
- There was a kid at our school called Dean Smith who used to wear a 'Benny Dut' to demonstrate how unfathomably stupid he is.
- 2010, Alan Wright, Wright Here:
- The result is that I’m entering Ward Jackson Park, near Hartlepool Cricket Club, dressed in people shorts, comfy top – and traditional blue-and-white Pooly dut (for culture starved southerners, a woolly cap).
- 2021 June 25, Debra Fox, “Brett's, the curly ramp and a dut! 11 things you only know if you're from Hartlepool”, in Hartlepool Mail:
- Grab your dut – we’re off for a trip down memory lane for a hot pork pie from Seaton Baths! […] These singing angels, pictured at a previous Hartlepool Christmas lights switch-on, are all kitted out in their duts (woolly hats) for winter.
Interjection
dut
- Said typically in marching bands and drum corps to keep track of beat when one is not playing.
Anagrams
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Basque
Pronunciation
Verb
dut (masculine allocutive diat, feminine allocutive dinat)
- First-person singular (nik), taking third-person singular (hura) as direct object, present indicative form of izan.
Usage notes
Linguistically, this verb form can be seen as belonging to the reconstructed citation form edun instead of izan.
Catalan
Alternative forms
Etymology
Pronunciation
Participle
dut (feminine duta, masculine plural duts, feminine plural dutes)
- past participle of dur
Central Franconian
Alternative forms
- dot (southern Moselle Franconian and Siegerland)
Etymology
From Old High German *dōd, northern variant of tōt.
Pronunciation
Adjective
dut (masculine dude or duhe, feminine and plural dut or duh or dude)
- (Ripuarian, northern Moselle Franconian) dead; not alive
- Do litt ene dude Honk nevve der Stroß.
- There’s a dead dog lying by the road.
Usage notes
- The inflections duhe, duh are restricted to westernmost Ripuarian.
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Dutch
Pronunciation
Audio: (file)
Etymology 1
Noun
dut m (plural dutten, diminutive dutje n)
- (usually in the diminutive) a nap
Etymology 2
See the etymology of the corresponding lemma form.
Verb
dut
- inflection of dutten:
French
Pronunciation
Verb
dut
- third-person singular past historic of devoir
Friulian
Etymology
From Vulgar Latin tōttus, alteration of Latin tōtus. Compare Ladin dut, Romansch tut, Istriot doûto, Italian tutto, Romanian tot, French tout, Spanish todo.
Adjective
dut m (feminine dute)
Garo
Etymology
Noun
dut
Kamkata-viri
Ladin
Lower Sorbian
Pite Sami
Rohingya
Saterland Frisian
Scottish Gaelic
Turkish
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