-ette
English
Etymology
From Middle English -ette, a borrowing from Old French -ette, from Latin -itta, the feminine form of Latin -ittus.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /ɛt/
Suffix
-ette
- Used to form nouns meaning a smaller form of something.
- Used to form nouns meaning the female equivalent of.
- Used to form nouns meaning an imitation or substitute of something.
- leather + -ette → leatherette
- (Polari) Used to form nouns with a Polari context or an association with gay subculture.
- 1967, Kenneth Williams as Sandy, “Gaslight Son of Flicker”, in Round the Horne, written by Barry Took and Marty Feldman:
- You may have vada'd one of our tiny bijou masterpiecettes, heartface.
- 2002, O'Neill, Gilda, The Sins Of Their Fathers (Eastend Trilogy; 1):
- 'Shame, eh, my little cherry? I was really bonar for him and all. It'll be a lonely old arthur for me tonight as usual. Ah well, let's have another little drinkette then, shall we? And perhaps, Poppett,' he sighed histrionically. 'I'll learn to keep my queeny old polari for them what appreciates it. Or for them what admints it,'
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Derived terms
Hungarian
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): [ɛtːɛ]
Suffix
-ette
- (past-tense personal suffix) Used to form the third-person singular past tense of verbs (definite conjugations).
- (causative past-tense personal suffix, only after verb stems ending in two consonants or a long vowel + t, resulting in forms homonymous with the above sense) Used to form the causative third-person singular past tense (definite conjugations), -val/-vel.
Usage notes
- (past tense suffix) Variants:
- -ta is added to most back vowel verbs
- -te is added to most front vowel verbs
- -tta is added to back vowel verbs ending in a vowel (hí, fú, ó, ró, rí, szí)
- -tte is added to front vowel verbs ending in a vowel (lő, nyű, sző)
- -otta is added to back vowel verbs ending in two consonants or a long vowel + t, or to monosyllables ending in -t (fut, nyit, except lát)
- -ette is added to unrounded front vowel verbs ending in two consonants or a long vowel + t, or to monosyllables ending in -t (vet)
- -ötte is added to rounded front vowel verbs ending in two consonants or a long vowel + t, or to monosyllables ending in -t (köt, süt, üt)
Homonymy exists between regular and causative past tense forms of consonant + t types of front-vowel verbs, in all the six persons, both with definite and indefinite endings, except for the third-person singular indefinite form (-ettem, -ettél, –, -ettünk, -ettetek, -ettek; -ettem, -etted, -ette, -ettük, -ettétek, -ették; -ettelek). On the other hand, other types of front-vowel verbs as well as back-vowel verbs take different forms for the regular and the causative past tense (e.g. -ottam and -attam, e.g. ugrottam and ugrattam among similar back-vowel verbs, other front-vowel verb types having clearly distinct forms: kértem vs. kérettem, kerestem vs. kerestettem). However, the -val/-vel argument is compulsory with the causative sense, so it makes the distinction easier (e.g. megértettem velük a különbséget – “I made them understand the difference”).
See also
- Category:Hungarian verb forms
- Appendix:Hungarian suffixes
Italian
Pronunciation 1
- IPA(key): /ˈɛt.te/
Suffix
-ette
- Used with a stem to form the third-person singular past historic of regular -ere verbs.
Synonyms
Pronunciation 2
- IPA(key): /ˈet.te/