abete
Italian
Etymology
From Latin abiētem, accusative of abiēs (“fir, deal”), from Proto-Italic *abiets.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /aˈbe.te/
- Stress: abéte
- Hyphenation: a‧be‧te
Noun
abete m (plural abeti)
- (botany) fir, fir tree, particularly the silver fir (Abies alba)
- 1321, Dante Alighieri, La divina commedia: Purgatorio [The Divine Comedy: Purgatory] (paperback), Bompiani, published 2001, Canto XXII, lines 130–135, page 343:
- Ma tosto ruppe le dolci ragioni ¶ un alber che trovammo in mezza strada, ¶ con pomi a odorar soavi e buoni; ¶ e come abete in alto si digrada ¶ di ramo in ramo, così quello in giuso, ¶ cred’ io, perché persona sù non vada.
- But soon their sweet discourses interrupted a tree which midway in the road we found, with apples sweet and grateful to the smell. And even as a fir-tree tapers upward from bough to bough, so downwardly did that; I think in order that no one might climb it.
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- deal (fir wood)
Anagrams
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