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sis
From Wiktionary, the free dictionary
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See also: Appendix:Variations of "sis"
Languages (24)
Translingual • English
Azerbaijani • Bouyei • Catalan • Czech • Dutch • French • Galician • Gothic • Haitian Creole • Ido • Kankanaey • Latin • Louisiana Creole • Mauritian Creole • Navajo • Northern Sami • Old French • Old High German • Romansch • Tok Pisin • Turkish • Western Apache
Page categories
Azerbaijani • Bouyei • Catalan • Czech • Dutch • French • Galician • Gothic • Haitian Creole • Ido • Kankanaey • Latin • Louisiana Creole • Mauritian Creole • Navajo • Northern Sami • Old French • Old High German • Romansch • Tok Pisin • Turkish • Western Apache
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Translingual
Symbol
sis
See also
English
Pronunciation
Noun
- (informal) Clipping of sister.
- big sis
- 1980, Stephen King, The Wedding Gig:
- My sis is tying the knot. I want you to play for the reception.
- 2023 January 3, amanda 🍒(@ amc0124), Twitter:
- Call me when ur 3 year old daughter knows SZA lyrics, girl said “you still playin the pick me, I’m still playin the victim” we don’t care if it’s backwards sis learned that all on her own 🥹
Synonyms
- (sister): sissy
Translations
sister
|
See also
- sis boom bah (etymologically unrelated)
Anagrams
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Azerbaijani
Etymology
Noun
sis (definite accusative sisi, plural sislər)
Declension
Further reading
- “sis” in Obastan.com.
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Bouyei
Etymology
From Proto-Tai *siːᴮ (“four”), from Middle Chinese 四 (MC sijH, “four”), from Proto-Sino-Tibetan *pV-lij (“four”). Cognate with Thai สี่ (sìi), Northern Thai ᩈᩦ᩵, Lao ສີ່ (sī), Lü ᦉᦲᧈ (ṡii¹), Tai Dam ꪎꪲ꪿, Shan သီႇ (sìi), Tai Nüa ᥔᥤᥱ (sǐ), Ahom 𑜏𑜣 (sī), Zhuang seiq.
Pronunciation
Numeral
| < 3 | 4 | 5 > |
|---|---|---|
| Cardinal : sis | ||
sis
Synonyms
- siq (in loanwords from Chinese)
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Catalan
Pronunciation
Etymology 1
| 60 | ||
| ← 5 | 6 | 7 → |
|---|---|---|
| Cardinal: sis Ordinal (Central): sisè Ordinal (Valencian): sisé Ordinal (Latinate): sext Ordinal abbreviation (Central): 6è Ordinal abbreviation (Valencian): 6é Ordinal abbreviation (Latinate): 6t Multiplier: sèxtuple | ||
| Catalan Wikipedia article on 6 | ||
Inherited from Latin sex, from Proto-Indo-European *swéḱs.
Numeral
sis m or f
Noun
sis m (plural sisos)
Etymology 2
Noun
sis
References
- “sis” in Diccionari català-valencià-balear, Antoni Maria Alcover and Francesc de Borja Moll, 1962.
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Czech
Pronunciation
Contraction
sis
Usage notes
When using a reflexive verb in the second-person singular past form and in conditional, the auxiliary verb být (“to be”) is replaced with just -s appended to the reflexive pronoun se, si. The full form “jsi se”, “jsi si” is proscribed as hypercorrect.
Related terms
Dutch
Pronunciation
Verb
sis
- inflection of sissen:
Anagrams
French
Etymology
Pronunciation
Participle
sis (feminine sise, masculine plural sis, feminine plural sises)
- past participle of seoir
Verb
sis
- (rare) first/second-person singular past historic of seoir
- 1785, Charles Baudelaire, Annales poétique depuis l’origine de la poésie françoise, Tome 33:
- Au carabet, lorſque je ſis à table,
Je ne bois qu’à ma ſoif, & que le cœur m’en dit:
Mais quand Margot me tient au lit,
Tout-ci, tout-ca,
Par-ci, par-là !.- (please add an English translation of this quotation)
Adjective
sis (feminine sise, masculine plural sis, feminine plural sises)
- (law or literary) located
- 2019, Alain Damasio, chapter 4, in Les furtifs [The Stealthies], La Volte, →ISBN:
- Par les larges hublots du lab, sis au sixième étage, la vue dominait une mer orangée de tuiles en terre cuite qui rappelaient que cette ville avait été, avant d'être « civinisée », une plutôt avenante cité provençale.
- The view from the lab's big windows, located on the sixth floor, overlooked a sea of orange terracotta tiles, which were a reminder that before it was "civinized", this had been a rather charming Provençal town.
Further reading
- “sis”, in Trésor de la langue française informatisé [Digitized Treasury of the French Language], 2012.
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Galician
Noun
sis m pl
Gothic
Romanization
sis
- romanization of 𐍃𐌹𐍃
Haitian Creole
Etymology
Pronunciation
Numeral
sis
Ido
| 60 | ||
| ← 5 | 6 | 7 → |
|---|---|---|
| Cardinal: sis Ordinal: sisesma Adverbial: sisfoye Multiplier: sisopla Fractional: sisima | ||
Etymology
From English six, French six, German sechs, Spanish seis, Italian sei, Russian шесть (šestʹ), all ultimately from Proto-Indo-European *swéḱs.
Numeral
sis
- six (6)
Kankanaey
Etymology
Pronunciation
Article
sis
- alternative form of si
See also
References
- Janet L. Allen (2014), Kankanaey: A Role and Reference Grammar Analysis (overall work in English), →ISBN, page 128
Latin
Pronunciation
- (Classical Latin) IPA(key): [ˈsiːs]
- (modern Italianate Ecclesiastical) IPA(key): [ˈsis]
Etymology 1
Contraction of sī vīs, from sī (“if”) + vīs (“you want”), the second person of volō (“to want”); literally, "if you want".
Phrase
sīs sg (plural sultis)
- (when addressing a single person) if you want, if you please, if you're willing, if you prefer
- Synonym: sōdēs
Alternative forms
See also
Etymology 2
See the etymology of the corresponding lemma form.
Verb
sīs
References
- “sis”, in Charlton T. Lewis and Charles Short (1879), A Latin Dictionary, Oxford: Clarendon Press
- “sis”, in Charlton T. Lewis (1891), An Elementary Latin Dictionary, New York: Harper & Brothers
- “sis”, in Gaffiot, Félix (1934), Dictionnaire illustré latin-français, Hachette.
Louisiana Creole
| < 5 | 6 | 7 > |
|---|---|---|
| Cardinal : sis | ||
Pronunciation
Etymology 1
Inherited from French six (“six”).
Numeral
sis
Usage notes
Etymology 2
Inherited from French sucer (“to suck”).
Verb
sis
- short form of sisé (“to suck”)
Mauritian Creole
| < 5 | 6 | 7 > |
|---|---|---|
| Cardinal : sis Ordinal : siziem | ||
Etymology
Numeral
sis
Navajo
Pronunciation
Etymology 1
From Proto-Athabaskan *səxʸ. Cognate with Western Apache sis, Chiricahua sis, Mescalero sis, Jicarilla sis, Plains Apache sis, Ahtna sez.
Noun
sis
Usage notes
The possessed forms of this noun are based on the stem -ziiz rather than -sis. Thus shiziiz (“my belt”), biziiz (“his/her/their belt”), et cetera, not *shisis, *bisis.
Inflection
Etymology 2
Cognate with Tsuut'ina sis, Beaver shís, hís, Sekani hís, Chipewyan sheθ, Carrier shuθ.
Noun
sis
Alternative forms
Derived terms
- Sis Naateel (“Wide Belt Mesa NM, Sisnathyel Mesa”)
- Sisnaajiní (“Blanca Peak”)
- Tsisnaajiní (“Blanca Peak”)
Northern Sami
Pronunciation
Pronoun
sīs
Old French
Etymology
From Latin sex, from Proto-Indo-European *swéḱs.
Pronunciation
Numeral
sis
Descendants
Old High German
Verb
sīs
Romansch
| < 5 | 6 | 7 > |
|---|---|---|
| Cardinal : sis | ||
Alternative forms
Etymology
From Latin sex (compare Spanish seis), from Proto-Indo-European *swéḱs.
Numeral
sis
Tok Pisin
Etymology
Noun
sis
Turkish
Etymology
From Ottoman Turkish سیس (sis, “freckle, spot; mist, fog”), origin unknown.
Pronunciation
Audio: (file)
Noun
sis (definite accusative sisi, plural sisler)
Declension
Derived terms
References
- Nişanyan, Sevan (2002–), “sis”, in Nişanyan Sözlük
Western Apache
Etymology
From Proto-Athabaskan *səx. Cognate with Navajo sis (-ziiz), Chiricahua sis (-sis), Mescalero sis (-siseh), Jicarilla sis (-ziz), Plains Apache sis.
Pronunciation
Noun
sis (possessed form -ziz)
Inflected forms
- shiziz = "my belt"
- biziz = "her/his/their belt"
Derived terms
- sis bá dahs'áné = "belt buckle"
- -zizt'ah = "waist"
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