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eba
From Wiktionary, the free dictionary
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See also: Appendix:Variations of "eba"
English
Etymology
Noun
eba (uncountable)
- A stiff dough made by soaking garri in hot water and kneading it with a baton.
- 2023, Stephen Buoro, The Five Sorrowful Mysteries of Andy Africa, Bloomsbury Circus, page 18:
- I don’t grumble, even though eba clings to surfaces, especially wooden ones, like superglue.
See also
swallows
- amala
- fufu
- poundo, pounded yam
- semovita
- tuwo
Anagrams
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Catalan
Etymology
Borrowed from Sardinian ebba, from Latin equa. Compare standard egua, inherited from Latin.
Pronunciation
Noun
eba f (plural ebes)
References
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Lingala
Verb
-eba (infinitive koeba)
- to know
Northern Ndebele
Etymology
From Proto-Bantu *-jíba.
Verb
-éba
- to steal
Inflection
This verb needs an inflection-table template.
Portuguese
Etymology
Variant of oba.
Pronunciation
Interjection
eba!
Further reading
- “eba”, in Dicionário Priberam da Língua Portuguesa (in Portuguese), Lisbon: Priberam, 2008–2025
Southern Ndebele
Etymology
From Proto-Bantu *-jíba.
Verb
-êba
- to steal
Inflection
This verb needs an inflection-table template.
Xhosa
Etymology
From Proto-Bantu *-jíba.
Verb
-êba
- (transitive) to steal
Inflection
This verb needs an inflection-table template.
Zulu
Etymology
From Proto-Bantu *-jíba.
Verb
-êba
- to steal
- Synonym: -khwabanisa
Inflection
Derived terms
References
- C. M. Doke; B. W. Vilakazi (1972), “eɓa”, in Zulu-English Dictionary, →ISBN: “eɓa (6.3)”
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