nase

See also: Nase and nãse

English

Noun

nase (plural nases or nase)

  1. A freshwater potamodromous fish, Chondrostoma nasus.

Translations

Anagrams


French

Adjective

nase (plural nases)

  1. Alternative spelling of naze (worthless, knackered)

Further reading


Guaraní

Verb

nase

  1. to be born

Interlingue

Noun

nase

  1. nose

Latin

Noun

nāse

  1. vocative singular of nāsus

Middle High German

Etymology

From Old High German nasa, from Proto-Germanic *nasō, from Proto-Indo-European *néh₂s-.

Noun

nase f

  1. nose

Descendants

  • Alemannic German: Nase, Naase
    Swabian: Nas
  • Bavarian: Nosn
  • Central Franconian: Nas, Nos
    Kölsch: Naas
  • East Franconian:
    Main-Franconian: Nous
  • German: Nase
  • Luxembourgish: Nues
  • Vilamovian: nōs, nōz
  • Yiddish: נאָז (noz)

Norwegian Nynorsk

Etymology 1

From Old Norse nǫs f, plural nasar and nasir

Noun

nase m (definite singular nasen, indefinite plural nasar, definite plural nasane)

  1. nose (organ)
    Du har noko på nasen din.
    You've got something on your nose.
  2. nose (tip of an object)
    Nasen på flyet var dekt med snø.
    The nose of the airplane was covered in snow.

Derived terms

Etymology 2

From nase.

Alternative forms

Verb

nase (present tense nasar, past tense nasa, past participle nasa, passive infinitive nasast, present participle nasande, imperative nas/nase)

  1. to smell, sniff
    Sauen nasa på maten, men åt han ikkje.
    The sheep sniffed the food, but did not eat it.
  2. to nose (snoop)

See also

References


Tarantino

Noun

nase

  1. nose
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