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See also: Mosquito

English

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English Wikipedia has an article on:
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Aedes aegypti biting a human.

Alternative forms

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Etymology

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Borrowed from Spanish mosquito (gnat), diminutive of mosca (fly), from Latin musca (fly), from Proto-Indo-European *mūs- (fly, stinging fly, gnat). Cognate with West Flemish meuzie (mosquito), dialectal Swedish mausa (mosquito), Lithuanian musė (a fly) and Sicilian muschitta (midge). See also midge. First attested in the 1580s.

Pronunciation

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Noun

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mosquito (plural mosquitoes or mosquitos)

  1. A small flying insect of the family Culicidae, the females of which bite humans and animals and suck blood, leaving an itching bump on the skin, and sometimes carrying diseases like malaria, dengue and yellow fever.
    Synonym: (US, informal) skeeter

Hypernyms

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Derived terms

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Descendants

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  • Cornish: moskito
  • Jamaican Creole: maskitta

Translations

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Verb

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mosquito (third-person singular simple present mosquitos, present participle mosquitoing, simple past and past participle mosquitoed)

  1. To fly close to the ground, seemingly without a course.

Galician

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Pronunciation

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  • IPA(key): /mosˈkito/ [mos̺ˈki.t̪ʊ]
  • Rhymes: -ito
  • Hyphenation: mos‧qui‧to

Noun

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mosquito m (plural mosquitos)

  1. mosquito

Italian

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Noun

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mosquito m (plural mosquiti)

  1. mosquito

Old Spanish

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Etymology

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    From mosca (fly) +‎ -ito (diminutive suffix).

    Pronunciation

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    Noun

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    mosquito m (plural mosquitos)

    1. mosquito
      • c. 1250, Alfonso X, Lapidario, f. 107v:
        […] ſera aguardado del danno delos moſquitos. ⁊ de todas maneras de moſcas que seã pozonadas o mordedores. / Et eſto es mas deſcendiẽdo ſobreſta piedra la ũtud de fig̃a de moſq̃to, o de alguna deſtas otras moſcas que dixiemos.
        […] he will be kept from the harm of mosquitos and all manners of flies that are venomous or that bite. And this will happen more when over this stone descends the virtue of the figure of the mosquito, or that of another one of the flies we mentioned.

    Descendants

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    • Spanish: mosquito (see there for further descendants)

    Portuguese

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    Portuguese Wikipedia has an article on:
    Wikipedia pt

    Etymology

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      Borrowed from Spanish mosquito, from Old Spanish mosquito, from mosca + -ito.

      Pronunciation

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      • Rhymes: -itu
      • Hyphenation: mos‧qui‧to

      Noun

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      mosquito m (plural mosquitos)

      1. mosquito
        Synonyms: (regional) carapanã, (regional) muriçoca

      Derived terms

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      Descendants

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      Spanish

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      Etymology

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        Inherited from Old Spanish mosquito, from mosca + -ito.

        Cognate with Sicilian muschitta (midge).

        Pronunciation

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        Noun

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        mosquito m (plural mosquitos)

        1. mosquito
          Synonyms: zancudo, (Mexico) moyote, cénzalo
        2. gnat
        3. (Mexico, colloquial) trimmer
        4. (literal) diminutive of mosco (small fly)

        Derived terms

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        Descendants

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        See also

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        Further reading

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