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  1. Traductions de « dies » dans le dictionnaire gratuit latin - français : jour, journée, date. Vérifiez beaucoup plus de traductions et dexemples.

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    Pronunciation

    1. IPA(key): /daɪz/ 2. Homophone: dyes 3. Rhymes: -aɪz

    Verb

    dies 1. third-person singular simple present indicative of die

    Noun

    dies 1. plural of die (when used in the sense of a pattern / of obsolete spelling of dye)

    Pronunciation

    1. IPA(key): (Central, Balearic) [ˈdi.əs] 2. IPA(key): (Valencian) [ˈdi.es]

    Noun

    dies 1. plural of dia

    Alternative forms

    1. dis, diess (obsolete) 2. dieß

    Pronunciation

    1. IPA(key): [ˈdiːs] 2. Rhymes: -iːs

    Pronoun

    dies 1. Alternative form of dieses

    Alternative forms

    1. diez — obsolete,abecedario or Spanish spelling 2. diyes, dyes — common,abakada or Tagalog spelling

    Etymology

    Borrowed from Spanish diez.

    Pronunciation

    1. IPA(key): /ˈdjes/, [ˈd͡ʒes] 1. IPA(key): /ˈdijes/, [ˈdi.jes] 2. Hyphenation: di‧es

    Etymology

    Back-formed from the accusative diem (at a time when the vowel was still long), from Proto-Italic *djēm, the accusative of *djous, from Proto-Indo-European *dyḗws (“heaven, sky”). The original nominative survives as *diūs in two fossilised phrases: mē diūs fidius (an interjection) and nū diūs tertius (“day before yesterday”, literally “now (is) the third day”). The d in diēs is a puzzle with some suggesting dialect borrowing and others referring to an etymon *diyew- via Lindeman's Law. But no...

    Pronunciation

    1. (Classical) IPA(key): /ˈdi.eːs/, [ˈd̪ieːs̠] 2. (modern Italianate Ecclesiastical) IPA(key): /ˈdi.es/, [ˈd̪iːes]

    Noun

    diēs m or f (genitive diēī); fifth declension 1. A day, particularly: 1.1. A solar or sidereal day of about 24 hours, especially (historical) Roman dates reckoned from one midnight to the next. 1.1.1. in dies ― day by day 1.1.2. sub diem ― at daybreak 1.1.3. ante diem III idus Ianuarias ― the third day before the January ides 1.1.1. 405 CE, Jerome, Vulgate Exodus.16.26: 1.1.1.1. Sex diēbus colligite in diē autem septimō sabbatum est Dominō idcircō nōn inveniētur. 1.1.1.1.1. Six days ye shall...

    Verb

    dies 1. third-person singular/plural future indicative of diet

    Adverb

    dies 1. therefore, because of that, for that reason

    Conjunction

    dies 1. until 2. because

    Determiner

    dies 1. masculine/neuter genitive singular of die

    Determiner

    dies 1. locative singular of diet

    Etymology

    From Spanish diez and Portuguese dez and Kabuverdianu dés.

    Numeral

    dies 1. ten(10)

  2. Dĭēs (nom masc. V décl.) divinité. dĭēs [dies], diei. nom masculin V déclinaison. Voir la déclinaison de ce mot. 1 jour, journée. 2 terme, echéance, jour établi. 3 jour important ou fatal (anniversaire, mort, ruine) 4 date d'une lettre. 5 temps en général, période.

  3. Latin. [modifier le wikicode] Étymologie. [modifier le wikicode] De l’indo-européen commun *dyew[1](« briller, soleil, jour, dieu »), qui l’apparente à deus(« dieu »), divum(« ciel, plein air »), dives(« riche »), divus(« divin »), mais aussi au grec ancien Ζεύς, Zeúset à l'albanais diell(« soleil »). Nom commun.

  4. Translation. Day. Main Forms: Dies, Diei. Gender: Masculine/Feminine. Declension: Fifth. page revision: 6, last edited: 17 Mar 2010, 15:24 (5260 days ago)

  5. A «sabbato» transitur ad «prima sabbatorum», a septimo ad diem primum: Domini dies evadit dies Christi. Vérifiez les traductions 'Die' en latin. Cherchez des exemples de traductions Die dans des phrases, écoutez à la prononciation et apprenez la grammaire.

  6. mori, tessera, morior are the top translations of "die" into Latin. Sample translated sentence: It is sweet and right to die for your homeland. ↔ Dulce et decorum est pro patria mori. die verb noun grammar. (intransitive) To stop living; to become dead; to undergo death. [..]