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Definition 2024


-a

-a

See also: Appendix:Variations of "a"

English

Pronunciation

Suffix

-a

  1. plural of -um
  2. plural of -on
Usage notes
  • Whereas the regular pluralization in English involves adding -s or -es, English words derived from a Latin/Greek where the Latin/Greek would pluralize from -on (Greek) or -um (Latin) to -a do not always do so. Usage of -a instead of -s differs between words: sometimes the two are interchangeable (e.g. memorandums/memoranda, polyhedrons/polyhedra), sometimes one is far more common than the other (e.g. neurons over neura, automata over automatons), and sometimes one is completely absent from usage (e.g. bacteria over bacteriums, dendrons over dendra)
Derived terms
See also
Translations

Etymology 2

Possibly due to the propensity in some non-rhotic dialects to pronounce words ending in -er as if they ended in an -a.

Pronunciation

Suffix

-a

  1. (Northern England) Same as -er in Standard English.
    me fatha was a corka burna doon the shipyard — “My father was a corker burner at the shipyard.”
  2. (Black English and slang) Used to replace -er in nouns.
    gangsta — “gangster”
    brotha — “brother”
See also

Etymology 3

Representing the nominative singular case ending of Latin first-declension feminine nouns.

Pronunciation

Suffix

-a (plural -ae or )

  1. Marks singular nouns, with a foundation in Greek or Latin, often implying femininity, especially when contrasted with words terminating in -us.
Synonyms
Derived terms

Etymology 4

From Latin -a.

Pronunciation

Suffix

-a

  1. Changes an element or substance into an oxide.
    magnesia

Etymology 5

Shortened version of verb have.

Pronunciation

Suffix

-a

  1. (slang) Alternative form of -'ve
    who'da thunk it?
    shoulda, coulda, woulda

Etymology 6

Representing Italian, Portuguese, and Spanish feminine nouns.

Pronunciation

Suffix

-a

  1. Marks nouns, with a foundation in Italian, Spanish, or Portuguese, implying femininity.

Etymology 7

Added to lines of poetry and verse to maintain metrics.

Pronunciation

Suffix

-a

  1. Added for metrical reasons to poetry and verse

Etymology 8

Shortened version of preposition of.

Pronunciation

Suffix

-a

  1. (slang) clitic form of o'
    lotta, loadsa, cuppa, kinda, sorta

Etymology 9

Shortened version of verb to.

Pronunciation

Suffix

-a

  1. (informal) to (infinitive marker)
    oughta, wanna, gotta, gonna

References

  • Lesley Brown (editor), The Shorter Oxford English Dictionary, 5th edition (Oxford University Press, 2003 [1933], ISBN 978-0-19-860575-7), page 1
  • Christine A. Lindberg (editor), The Oxford College Dictionary, 2nd edition (Spark Publishing, 2007 [2002], ISBN 978-1-4114-0500-4), page 1

Dutch

Suffix

-a

  1. Plural form of -um
  2. feminine form of -us

Synonyms


Esperanto

Etymology

From feminine singular adjectives (and nouns) of the Romance languages, such as French ma, Italian mia, Spanish mía, fría.

Suffix

-a

  1. Related to, in the manner of, of. (Ending for all adjectives in Esperanto.)
    belo; bela — “beauty; beautiful”
    dekstro; dekstra — “the right direction (as opposed to left); to the right”
    vero; vera — “truth; true”
  2. Belonging to, of. (Ending for all possessive pronouns in Esperanto.)
    mia — “of me, my”
    via — “of you, your”
    ilia — “of them, their”
  3. -kind of. (Ending of all correlatives of kind in Esperanto.)
    kia — “what kind of
    tia — “that kind of
    nenia — “no kind of

Derived terms


Finnish

Alternative forms

  • (in words with front vowel harmony)

Etymology 1

From Proto-Finnic *-da, from the Proto-Uralic ablative case *-ta. A variant form *-ta (whence Finnish -ta) was used after a syllable with secondary stress (suffixal gradation).

Suffix

-a (front vowel harmony variant )

  1. (case suffix) Forms the partitive case of nouns, adjectives, numbers and some pronouns.

Usage notes

  • This suffix is used after a short vowel or the plural marker -j-.

Etymology 2

From Proto-Finnic *-dak. Historically, a form of a lative suffix.

Suffix

-a (front vowel harmony variant )

  1. (verbal suffix) Forms the short form of the first infinitive of verbs.

Usage notes

  • The first infinitive, short form, is the citation form of verbs.

See also


French

Suffix

-a

  1. Suffix indicating the third-person singular past historic of -er verbs.

Hungarian

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): [ɒ]

Suffix

-a

  1. (possessive suffix) his, her, its (third-person singular, single possession)
    ház (house)a háza (his/her/its house)

Declension

Inflection (stem in long/high vowel, back harmony)
singular plural
nominative -a
accusative -át
dative -ának
instrumental -ával
causal-final -áért
translative -ává
terminative -áig
essive-formal -aként
essive-modal -ául
inessive -ában
superessive -án
adessive -ánál
illative -ába
sublative -ára
allative -ához
elative -ából
delative -áról
ablative -ától

Usage notes

  • (possessive suffix) Variants:
    -a is added to back vowel words ending in a consonant
    -e is added to front vowel words ending in a consonant
    -ja is added to back vowel words ending in a consonant or a vowel. Final -a changes to -á-.
    -je is added to front vowel words ending in a consonant or a vowel. Final -e changes to -é-.

See also

  • Category:Hungarian noun forms
  • Appendix:Hungarian possessive suffixes

Icelandic

Suffix

-a

  1. Used to form verbs from nouns.
    sparksparka — a kick → to kick
    mjólkmjólka — milk → to milk
    vonvona — hope → to hope
    ávarpávarpa — an address → to address
    ritrita — a writ → to write
    rassrassa — an ass → to spank (on the ass)
  2. Used to form adverbs from adjectives.
    illurillabadbadly

Derived terms

See also


Ido

Suffix

-a

  1. suffix denoting adjective.
    arjento (silver (noun)) + -aarjenta (silver (adjective))

Derived terms

<a class='CategoryTreeLabel CategoryTreeLabelNs14 CategoryTreeLabelCategory' href='/wiki/Category:Ido_words_suffixed_with_-a'>Ido words suffixed with -a</a>

Usage notes

One may elide the final a of the adjectives, but with the condition not to produce accumulation from the consonants. One advise to use the elision mainly with the derivatived adjectives and particularly when they finish with -al-(a).[1]

References

  1. “KGD”, in Kompleta gramatiko detaloza (in Ido), accessed 2015-12-23

Italian

Suffix

-a

  1. Used, with a stem, to form the third-person singular present tense of -are verbs.
  2. Used, with a stem, to form the second-person singular imperative of -are verbs.
  3. Used, with a stem, to form the first-person singular, second-person singular and third-person singular present subjunctive of -ere verbs, and of those -ire verbs that do not insert "isc".
  4. Used, with a stem, to form the third-person singular imperative of -ere verbs, and of those -ire verbs that do not insert "isc".

Latin

Etymology 1

From Proto-Indo-European *-eh₂ (forming in this case masculine nouns).

Pronunciation

Suffix

-a m, f (genitive -ae); first declension

  1. suffixed to the roots of verbs, forms (usually masculine) agent nouns
    adveniō + -aadvena
    caedō + -a-cīda
    colō + -a-cola
    cōnferveō + -acōnferva f
    cōnsolidō + -acōnsolida f
    scrībō + -ascrība
Declension

First declension.

Case Singular Plural
nominative -a -ae
genitive -ae -ārum
dative -ae -īs
accusative -am -ās
ablative -īs
vocative -a -ae
Synonyms
  • (suffixed to the roots of verbs, forms masculine agent nouns): -ō¹
Derived terms
<a class='CategoryTreeLabel CategoryTreeLabelNs14 CategoryTreeLabelCategory' href='/wiki/Category:Latin_nouns_suffixed_with_-a'>Latin nouns suffixed with -a</a>

References

Etymology 2

From the Old Latin -ād, originally the ablative feminine singular form of first-declension adjectives (compare -us, suffix forming adjectives).

Pronunciation

Suffix

(not comparable)

  1. suffixed chiefly to the stems of adjectives terminating in -ter, forms adverbs which are frequently also used as prepositions
    cis + citrā
    exter + extrā
    in- + -ter + intrā
    uls + ultrā
Derived terms
<a class='CategoryTreeLabel CategoryTreeLabelNs14 CategoryTreeLabelCategory' href='/wiki/Category:Latin_adverbs_suffixed_with_-a'>Latin adverbs suffixed with -a</a>

References

Etymology 3

Declined forms of -us (suffix forming adjectives).

Pronunciation 1

Suffix

-a

  1. nominative feminine singular of -us
  2. nominative neuter plural of -us
  3. accusative neuter plural of -us
  4. vocative feminine singular of -us
  5. vocative neuter plural of -us

Pronunciation 2

Suffix

  1. ablative feminine singular of -us

Etymology 4

A conjugated form of -ō³ (suffix forming verbs).

Pronunciation

Suffix

  1. second-person singular present active imperative of

Latvian

Suffix

-a

  1. Used to derive feminine nouns from masculine nouns (like English -ess).

Synonyms

Related terms

Feminine suffixes that include -a:

Derived terms

<a class='CategoryTreeLabel CategoryTreeLabelNs14 CategoryTreeLabelCategory' href='/wiki/Category:Latvian_words_suffixed_with_-a'>Latvian words suffixed with -a</a>

Northern Sami

Etymology

From Proto-Samic *-ëk. Cognate with Finnish -e.

Suffix

-a (with odd-syllable stems -at)

  1. Forms nouns from verbs, indicating something used for performing the verb.
    loavdit (to cover the tent) + -aloavdda (tent cloth)
  2. Forms nouns from verbs, indicating something that results from having the verb's action performed.
    čállit (to write) + -ačála (writing)

Usage notes

This suffix triggers the weak grade on a preceding stressed syllable in the nominative singular and essive, and the strong grade in the other forms.

Inflection

Odd, no gradation
Nominative -a
Genitive -aga
Singular Plural
Nominative -a -agat
Accusative -aga -agiid
Genitive -aga -agiid
Illative -agii -agiidda
Locative -agis -agiin
Comitative -agiin -agiiguin
Essive -an
Possessive forms
Singular Dual Plural
1st person -agan -ageame -ageamet
2nd person -agat -ageatte -ageattet
3rd person -agis -ageaskka -ageaset

Derived terms

<a class='CategoryTreeLabel CategoryTreeLabelNs14 CategoryTreeLabelCategory' href='/wiki/Category:Northern_Sami_words_suffixed_with_-a'>Northern Sami words suffixed with -a</a>

Old English

Alternative forms

Etymology 1

From Proto-Germanic *-ō.

Suffix

-a

  1. Ending forming adverbs
    hwær + -ahwāra (where)
    ġilīco (similarly)
    singal (continuous) + -asingala (continually, constantly)

Etymology 2

Cognate with Old High German -o.

Suffix

-a m

  1. nominative masculine n-stem ending
    nama (name); scūa (shadow)
  2. used to form masculine agents from verbs
    huntian (to hunt) + -ahunta (hunter)
    etan (to eat) + -aǣta (eater)
Declension
Descendants

Old Norse

Suffix

-a

  1. indicates negation; does not

Portuguese

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /a/, IPA(key): /ɐ/

Etymology 1

From Old Portuguese -a, from Latin -a.

Suffix

-a f

  1. forms feminine nouns and adjectives
    Uruguai (Uruguay) + -auruguaia (woman from Uruguay)

Etymology 2

From Old Portuguese -a, from Latin -at.

Suffix

-a

  1. forms the third-person singular present indicative of verbs ending in -ar
    João fala português.
    John speaks Portuguese.

Etymology 3

From Old Portuguese -a, from Latin .

Suffix

-a

  1. forms the second-person singular affirmative imperative of verbs ending in -ar
    João, conta-nos o seu apelido.
    John, tell us your last name.

Etymology 4

Suffix

-a

  1. forms the first-person singular present subjunctive of verbs ending in -er and -ir
    É importante que eu coma carne.
    It is important that I eat meat.
  2. forms the third-person singular present subjunctive of verbs ending in -er and -ir
    É importante que ele coma carne.
    It is important that he eat meat.
  3. forms the third-person singular affirmative imperative of verbs ending in -er and -ir
    Ei você aí, coma carne.
    Hey you there, eat meat.
  4. forms the third-person singular negative imperative of verbs ending in -er and -ir
    Ei você aí, não coma carne.
    Hey you there, don’t eat meat.
Usage notes

The third-person imperative isn’t used with third person pronouns, it’s used with você, which is a second-person pronoun but always takes third-person conjugation.


Romanian

Alternative forms

  • -ua (used for feminine nouns ending in a stressed vowel or diphthong)

Etymology 1

From Latin illa, nominative feminine singular of ille.

Suffix

-a f

  1. (definite article) the (feminine singular, nominative and accusative)
Usage notes

This form of the definite article is used for feminine nouns in the nominative and accusative cases which end in or in an unstressed vowel:

The suffix is also used with feminine adjectives in the nominative and accusative cases to make the articulated definite form, often for emphasis, and it is used before the noun it modifies:

Related terms
  • -l (masculine/neuter singular nominative and accusative)
  • -i (masculine/neuter plural nominative and accusative)
  • -le (feminine plural nominative and accusative)
  • -lui (masculine/neuter singular genitive and dative)
  • -ei (feminine singular genitive and dative)
  • -lor (plural genitive and dative)

Etymology 2

From Latin -āre, the ending of the present active infinitive form of first conjugation verbs. Cognate with Spanish -ar, French -er, Italian -are, etc.

Suffix

-a

  1. A suffix forming infinitives of many verbs.
Related terms

See also


Serbo-Croatian

Suffix

-a (Cyrillic spelling )

  1. Suffix appended to words (usually verbal stems) to create a feminine noun, usually denoting a relation or to form a proper noun.

Spanish

Suffix

-a

  1. -ess. (Used to form feminine singular nouns.)
    señor; señora — “gentleman; lady”
    camarero; camarera — “waitor; waitress”
  2. (Used to form the feminine singular adjectives.)
    frío; fría — “cold; cold”
  3. -s. (Used to form the third-person singular (also used with usted) present indicative mood of regular -ar verbs.)
    hablar; habla — “to talk; talks”
  4. (Used to form the first and third-person singular (also used with usted) singular subjunctive mood of -er and -ir verbs, also used for the imperative mood of usted.)
    comer; aunque yo coma — “to eat; even if I ate”; salir; por favor, salga Ud. — “to leave; please leave (formal)”
  5. (Used to form the second-person singular imperative mood of -ar verbs.)
    hablar; ¡Habla! — “to talk; Talk!”

Derived terms


Swedish

Etymology

From Old Norse -a, from Proto-Germanic *-ōną.

Suffix

-a

  1. (on an positive adjective) Suffix to mark that the corresponding noun is either in plural or in definite singular form
  2. Marker of definiteness for noun plurals ending in -n (fourth declension).
    läten; lätena; "sounds; the sounds"
  3. A verb-building suffix that can be added to noun or adjectives, such as disk (dishes)diska (do the dishes) or öl (beer)öla (to drink beer)
  4. Create a noun from a numeral, such as tre (three)trea (a three; a bronze medalist; a three-room apartment)

Usage notes

On adjectives 
Traditionally, if the noun is in definite singular form it should not refer to a male human, if it uses the suffix -a. If it refers to such a person, the suffix should instead be -e, but one should note that this rule is not universally adhered to - in particular dialects of northern Sweden does not recognize the -e suffix at all, but use -a in all instances.

Derived terms

<a class='CategoryTreeLabel CategoryTreeLabelNs14 CategoryTreeLabelCategory' href='/wiki/Category:Swedish_words_suffixed_with_-a'>Swedish words suffixed with -a</a>

Turkish

Alternative forms

  • (after a vowel) -ya, -ye
  • (after a possessive, dative only) -na, -ne
  • (in words with front vowel harmony) -e

Suffix

-a (in words with back vowel harmony)

  1. Used to form the dative case.
    İstanbul’a — “to Istanbul”
    Ankara’ya — “to Ankara”
    İzmir’e — “to Izmir”
    babasına — “to his father”
  2. Used to form gerunds.
    yürüye — “by walking”

Volapük

Suffix

-a

  1. A morpheme used to mark the genitive singular of a word (such as a noun, adjective or pronoun). It is also the most common morpheme used in creating innumerable compound words, some of which can be very long (e.g., pledadinaselidöp "toy store, toy shop", tanoganilamedin "antibiotic", taglumaladälamedin "anti-depressant", natrinakarbatazüd telik "bicarbonate of soda").
    Elaf Tyrannosaurus rex älifon in taledadil, kel nu binon dil Nolüda-Meropa.
    Tyrannosaurus rex lived in an area of the earth, which is now a part of North America.
    Buks binons stumem lärnazilana (/ lärnazilanastumem / stumem lärnazilanik).
    Books are a scholar's tools.