cometa
Aragonese
References
- Bal Palazios, Santiago (2002), “cometa”, in Dizionario breu de a luenga aragonesa, Zaragoza, ISBN 978-84-7753-949-0
Catalan
Pronunciation
Latin
Pronunciation
- (Classical) IPA(key): /koˈmeː.ta/, [kɔˈmeː.ta]
Noun
comēta m (genitive comētae); first declension
- Alternative form of comētēs
- 1666, Theatri Cometici Exitus De Significatione Cometarum , p. 2
- Rem mihi pergratam & publico per utilem, Vir Humanissime, fecisti, quod occasione operis mei & sententiae de Significatione Cometarum multa, eaque gravia, dubia moveris.
- Most kind man, you have done me a very pleasing service and the public a very useful service, because you have removed many, and serious, problems on the occasion of my work and opinion on the Significance of Comets.
- Rem mihi pergratam & publico per utilem, Vir Humanissime, fecisti, quod occasione operis mei & sententiae de Significatione Cometarum multa, eaque gravia, dubia moveris.
- 1833, Supplement to Dr. Bradley's Miscellaneous Works: with an Account of Harriot's Astronomical Papers , p. 54
- Docet philosophia Newtoniana cometas equidem ac planetas attractionis vi, quae in ratione duplicata distantiarum reciproca a sole est, in orbibus ellipticis circa solem in communi foco positum revolvi.
- Newtonian physics teaches that comets, just like planets, circle in elliptical orbits around the sun as a common focus, by the force of attraction which is proportional to the inverse squared distance from the sun.
- Docet philosophia Newtoniana cometas equidem ac planetas attractionis vi, quae in ratione duplicata distantiarum reciproca a sole est, in orbibus ellipticis circa solem in communi foco positum revolvi.
- 1666, Theatri Cometici Exitus De Significatione Cometarum , p. 2
Portuguese
Pronunciation
- Hyphenation: co‧me‧ta
- (Brazil) IPA(key): /ko.ˈme.ta/, /ko.ˈme.tɐ/
Etymology 1
From Latin cometa, from Ancient Greek κομήτης (komḗtēs, “long-haired”).
Related terms
- cometário
- cometologia
Etymology 2
Inflected form of cometer (“to commit”).
Spanish
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): [ko̞ˈme̞.ta̠]
Etymology 1
From Latin comēta, from Ancient Greek κομήτης (komḗtēs, “longhaired”), referring to the tail of a comet, from κόμη (kómē, “hair”).
Etymology 2
See cometer
Verb
cometa
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