Significado (Inglés)

  1. (intransitive, irregular, strong) to stand (to be upright, support oneself in an erect position)
  2. (intransitive, irregular, strong) to be, to stand (to be placed or located somewhere in an upright position)
  3. (intransitive, irregular, strong) to be written, it says (in a book, on a sign, etc.)
  4. (intransitive, irregular, strong) to stay, to be still, to have stopped or not yet started moving
  5. (copulative, intransitive, irregular, strong) to stay, to stand, to be (in a certain state, position or circumstance)
  6. (irregular, strong) to suit, to become (to look attractive on, of a garment, color etc.)
  7. (irregular, strong) to represent, to stand for
  8. (irregular, strong) to support, to stand by
  9. (Switzerland, irregular, strong) to put, to place
  10. (colloquial, intransitive, irregular, strong) to have a thing for, to fancy
  11. (impersonal, irregular, strong) Used to state the current scoreline in a team sport

Conceptos

poner de pie

estar en pie

quedar bien

estar parado

sentar bien

estar derecho

estar paralizado

permanecer de pie

ponerse en pie

Sinónimos

geschrieben stehen

aufrecht stehen

stehen müssen

gut zusammenpassen

herausspringen

vorspringen

passen zu

berichtet werden

sich gegenüber sehen

sich stauen

geschafft haben

auf den Füßen stehen

vom Tisch

fertig geworden

zu Ende gebracht

mit seinem Namen werben

zu etwas namentlich bekennen

unter der Nennung des eigenen Namens unterstützen

Frecuencia

A1
Dialectos

Cantón de Basilea-Campiña

Cantón de Basilea-Campiña

stoo

Datos proporcionados por: Deutsch-Schweizerdeutsches Wörterbuch

Pronunciado como (IPA)
/ˈʃteː.ən/
Etimología (Inglés)

In summary

From Middle High German stān, stēn, from Old High German stān, stēn, from Proto-West Germanic *stān, from Proto-Germanic *stāną. The -h- was introduced into the spelling by analogy with sehen, in which it had become mute but was retained in spelling. Past forms are inherited from Old High German stuond, stuonden, etc. These are themselves suppletive of Proto-West Germanic *standan's past forms in *stōnd-, replacing former forms inherited from *stān in *stōþ-. Compare english stood. Their a-vocalism is due to analogy with other strong verbs such as binden (band) and finden (fand), dating back to Middle High German. See also stand.

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