céu
See also: ceu and ce'u
Portuguese
Etymology
From Old Portuguese ceo (“sky; heaven”), from Latin caelum (“sky”), from Proto-Italic *kailom, from Proto-Indo-European *keh₂i-lom (“whole”), from *keh₂i-.
Cognate with Galician ceo, Spanish cielo, Catalan cel, Occitan cèl, French ciel, Italian cielo and Romanian cer.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /ˈsɛw/
- Rhymes: -ɛw
Noun
céu m (plural céus)
- sky
- O céu é azul. ― The sky is blue.
- 1965, Amália Rodrigues, “Fado Português”:
- O Fado nasceu um dia, / quando o vento mal bulia / e o céu o mar prolongava, / na amurada dum veleiro, / no peito dum marinheiro / que, estando triste, cantava.
- Fado was born one day, / when the wind was blowing hard / and the sky was extending the sea, / in the bulwark of a ship, / in the chest of a sailor / who, being sad, was singing.
- O Fado nasceu um dia, / quando o vento mal bulia / e o céu o mar prolongava, / na amurada dum veleiro, / no peito dum marinheiro / que, estando triste, cantava.
- 2003, J. K. Rowling, Lya Wyler, Harry Potter e a Ordem da Fênix, Rocco, page 246:
- Então continuaram a estudar enquanto o céu lá fora se tornava gradualmente mais escuro.
- Then they continued to study while the sky outside was becoming gradually darker.
- Então continuaram a estudar enquanto o céu lá fora se tornava gradualmente mais escuro.
- heaven
Usage notes
This word can be used in the singular or plural indiscriminately. Plural usage tends to be more poetic.
Derived terms
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