diabo
See also: Diabo
Portuguese
Etymology
From Old Portuguese diabo, earlier diaboo, displacing the collateral forms diabre, diabro and diablo, from Ecclesiastical Latin, Late Latin diabolus (“devil”) (probably borrowed as a semi-learned term), itself from Ancient Greek διάβολος (diábolos, “slanderer”).
Pronunciation
Noun
diabo m (plural diabos)
Noun
diabo m (plural diabos, feminine diaba, feminine plural diabas, feminine diáboa, feminine plural diáboas)
- an evil or perverse person
- a mischievous person
Derived terms
- diabinho, diabozinho, diabrete (diminutives)
- diabão (augmentative)
- diabalma
- diabo-da-tasmânia
- diabo-marinho
- peixe-diabo
- que diabo, que diabos
- o que diabos
- por que diabos
Descendants
- Kadiwéu: diaabo
This article is issued from Wiktionary. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.