mother
Reikšmė
-
- A female parent, sometimes especially a human; a female who parents a child (which she has given birth to, adopted, or fostered).
- A female who has given birth to a baby; this person in relation to her child or children.
- A pregnant female; mother-to-be; a female who gestates a baby.
- A female who donates a fertilized egg or donates a body cell which has resulted in a clone.
- A female ancestor.
- A source or origin.
- Something that is the greatest or most significant of its kind. (See mother of all.)
- A title of respect for one's mother-in-law.
- A term of address for one's wife.
- Any elderly woman, especially within a particular community.
- Any person or entity which performs mothering.
- Dregs, lees; a stringy, mucilaginous or film- or membrane-like substance (consisting of a culture of acetobacters) which develops in fermenting alcoholic liquids (such as wine, or cider), and turns the alcohol into acetic acid with the help of oxygen from the air.
- A locomotive which provides electrical power for a slug.
- The principal piece of an astrolabe, into which the others are fixed.
- The female superior or head of a religious house; an abbess, etc.
- (obsolete) Hysterical passion; hysteria; the uterus.
- A disc produced from the electrotyped master, used in manufacturing phonograph records.
- aA person who is admired, respected, or looked up to within a particular fandom or community; see also: serve cunt
Dažnis
Brūkšnelis kaip
moth‧er
Tariama kaip (IPA)
/ˈmʌðə/
Etimologija
Etymology tree Proto-Indo-European *méh₂tēr Proto-Germanic *mōdēr Proto-West Germanic *mōder Old English mōdor Middle English moder English mother From Middle English moder, from Old English mōdor, from Proto-West Germanic *mōder, from Proto-Germanic *mōdēr, from Proto-Indo-European *méh₂tēr. Doublet of mata, mater, and matrix. Some have proposed that the "dregs" sense is from Middle Dutch modder (“filth”), from Proto-Germanic *muþraz (“sediment”), but modder is not known in this meaning. On the other hand, words for "mother" have developed the secondary sense of "dregs" in several Romance and Germanic languages; compare Dutch moer, French mère de vinaigre, German Essigmutter, Italian madre, Medieval Latin māter, and Spanish madre.
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