ula - Wiktionary, the free dictionary (original) (raw)

From Wiktionary, the free dictionary

ula

  1. (international standards) ISO 639-3 language code for Fungwa.

ula

  1. Old Akkadian, Old Assyrian, and Old Babylonian form of ul (“not”)
    𒈪𒅎𒈠 𒌑𒆷 𒀀𒂵𒀊𒁉 [mimma ula aqabbi]mi-im-ma u₂-la a-qa₂-ab-bi ― I will not say anything.
    𒀜𒋫 𒌑𒆷 𒋾𒁲 [atta ula tīde]at-ta u₂-la ti-de ― Do you not know?

Cuneiform spellings

Phonetic
𒌑𒆷 (u₂-la) 𒅇𒆷 (u₃-la) 𒌑𒇲 (u₂-la₂)

ula

  1. first-person singular aorist of ul

ulà (plural urula, Basahan spelling ᜂᜎ)

  1. to spill any liquid
    Synonym: palis

úla class 14 (plural maúla class 6)

  1. The fruit of Parinari curatellifolia.

Abbreviation of ultralyhyet aallot.

ula

  1. FM broadcast band (range of VHF radio frequencies between 87.5 to 108.0 MHz, used for radio broadcasting)

From Proto-Polynesian *qura, from Proto-Oceanic *quraŋ, from Proto-Malayo-Polynesian *qudaŋ, from Proto-Austronesian *qudaŋ.

ula

  1. spiny lobster

Borrowed from Latin ūllus.

ula

  1. some, any (a certain, but only partly defined person or object)
    Me deziras lektar ula libro.
    I would like to read some book.
  2. certain
    Synonym: certena
    Ula viro decensis de Ierusalem a Ierico.
    A certain man went down from Jerusalem to Jericho.
  3. a, an (semi-indefinite article, where it is desired to emphasize indefiniteness)
    Ula dio en la lasta monato.
    One day in the last month.

From Old Irish ailad (“tomb, sepulchre, burial-cairn; penitential station”).

ula f (genitive singular **ula, nominative plural ulacha)

  1. tomb, sepulchre, mausoleum; vault, charnel house; sepulchral monument
  2. (stone structure, mound, etc., marking) penitential station
  3. (object marking) place of resort

Mutated forms of ula

radical eclipsis with _h_-prothesis with _t_-prothesis
ula n-ula hula not applicable

Note: Certain mutated forms of some words can never occur in standard Modern Irish.
All possible mutated forms are displayed for convenience.

ula

  1. romanization of ꦲꦸꦭ

From Proto-Mongolic *axula, compare Buryat уула (uula), Daur aul.

ula

  1. mountain

From Middle High German vülle and/or Old High German fullī.

ula f (plural ules)

  1. (Gherdëina, Badiot) stuffing, filling
    n crafon cun na ula de śulza de mariles
    a doughnut with an apricot jam filling
    crafuncins da ula vërda
    crafuncins with green spinach filling

ula (present tense ular or uler, past tense **ula or ulte, past participle **ula or ult, present participle ulande, imperative ul)

  1. to howl, particularly to howl like a wolf
    Ulven ular mot månen.
    The wolf howls at the moon.

Borrowed from Latin olla.

ūla f

  1. barrel, pot
    • c. 900 CE, Die altmittel- und altniederfränkischen Psalmen und Glossen [The Old Middle and Old Low Franconian psalms and glosses]:
      Iuda cuning mīn, moab ūla tohopin mīnis
      Judah, my king, Moab, pot of my hope

Declension of ūla (feminine ō/ōn-stem noun)

case singular plural
nominative ūla ūla, ūlon
accusative ūla, ūlon ūla, ūlon
genitive ūlon ūlono
dative ūlon ūlon

From Proto-Germanic *uwwalǭ, whence also Old English ūle, Old Norse ugla.

ūla f

  1. owl

ula m

  1. genitive singular of ul

From Proto-Polynesian *qura, from Proto-Oceanic *quraŋ, from Proto-Malayo-Polynesian *qudaŋ, from Proto-Austronesian *qudaŋ.

ula

  1. lobster
  2. crayfish (freshwater crustacean resembling lobster)

From Latin gula.

ula f (plural uli)

  1. (anatomy) throat

From Javanese ꦲꦸꦭ (ula, “snake”)

ula (Sundanese script ᮅᮜ)

  1. snake

ula

  1. (transitive) to pulverize

(This etymology is missing or incomplete. Please add to it, or discuss it at the Etymology scriptorium.)

ula

  1. a kind of fish

ula

  1. a planting stick

ula

  1. dog