panta

See also: pantà, pantă, and panta-

Finnish

Etymology

Loaned from Proto-Germanic *bandą. Compare English band, Estonian pand.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /ˈpɑntɑ/, [ˈpɑn̪t̪ɑ]
  • Rhymes: -ɑntɑ
  • Hyphenation: pan‧ta

Noun

panta

  1. A collar (device for restraining an animal).
  2. A choker (jewelry).
  3. Any ring that is used as an external support for example around a pole.

Declension

Inflection of panta (Kotus type 9/kala, nt-nn gradation)
nominative panta pannat
genitive pannan pantojen
partitive pantaa pantoja
illative pantaan pantoihin
singular plural
nominative panta pannat
accusative nom. panta pannat
gen. pannan
genitive pannan pantojen
pantainrare
partitive pantaa pantoja
inessive pannassa pannoissa
elative pannasta pannoista
illative pantaan pantoihin
adessive pannalla pannoilla
ablative pannalta pannoilta
allative pannalle pannoille
essive pantana pantoina
translative pannaksi pannoiksi
instructive pannoin
abessive pannatta pannoitta
comitative pantoineen

Anagrams


Icelandic

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /ˈpʰan̥ta/
    Rhymes: -an̥ta

Verb

panta (weak verb, third-person singular past indicative pantaði, supine pantað)

  1. (transitive, governs the accusative) to reserve, to order

Conjugation


Latin

Noun

panta

  1. nominative plural of panton
  2. accusative plural of panton
  3. vocative plural of panton

Quechua

Adjective

panta

  1. wrong, incorrect

Noun

panta

  1. mistake, error

Declension

See also


Swedish

Etymology

From Old Swedish panta, from pant + -a.

a pawn (2) machine

Verb

panta (present pantar, preterite pantade, supine pantat, imperative panta)

  1. to pawn
    Synonym: pantsätta
  2. to pawn; to use the container deposit legislation (bottle deposit) for cans and bottles from which you drink a beverage
    Jag pantade en colaburk och fick en enkrona tillbaka
    I pawned a cola can and got a one crown coin back.

Usage notes

  • In Sweden you can come to a supermarket and put bottles and cans such as coca-cola bottles and energy drink cans into a machine which then when you're finished gives you a receipt which you can turn in for money. Small cans (33 cl) and bottes (1,5 dl) gives you one crown and a big bottle (2L) gives you two. Historically only containers with ready to drink beverages had pant - the legislation - the so called blandsaft (squash that you mix with water) bottles gave you no money since you'd needed to mix it with water before drinking it. This has however been changed so the blandsaft bottles are nowadays accepted as pant.

Conjugation

References

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