Location via proxy:   [ UP ]  
[Report a bug]   [Manage cookies]                
See also: Quatro

English

edit

Noun

edit

quatro (plural quatros)

  1. Alternative form of cuatro
    • 1995, Stephen Stuempfle, The Steelband Movement: The Forging of a National Art in Trinidad and Tobago:
      By the late 1940s Jules had invented a quatro pan after observing a family playing parang, a Venezuelan-derived Christmas music traditional to Trinidad which is generally performed by vocalists accompanied by guitars, quatros, mandolins, a one-string box bass, chac-chacs, and scrapers.

Anagrams

edit

Franco-Provençal

edit

Etymology

edit

Inherited from Latin quattuor.

Numeral

edit

quatro (invariable) (ORB, broad)

  1. four

References

edit
  • quatre in DicoFranPro: Dictionnaire Français/Francoprovençal – on dicofranpro.llm.umontreal.ca
  • quatro in Lo trèsor Arpitan – on arpitan.eu

Galician

edit
Galician numbers (edit)
40[a], [b]
[a], [b] ←  3 4 5  → 
    Cardinal (reintegrationist): quatro
    Cardinal (standard): catro
    Ordinal (reintegrationist): quarto
    Ordinal (standard): cuarto
    Ordinal abbreviation:
    Multiplier (reintegrationist): quádruplo
    Multiplier (standard): cuádruplo

Numeral

edit

quatro (reintegrationist norm)

  1. four

Further reading

edit
  • quatro” in Dicionário Estraviz de galego (2014).

Interlingua

edit

Numeral

edit

quatro

  1. four

Istriot

edit

Alternative forms

edit

Etymology

edit

From Latin quattuor.

Numeral

edit

quatro

  1. four

Lombard

edit

Etymology

edit

From Latin quattuor.

Pronunciation

edit

Numeral

edit

quatro

  1. (Old Lombard) four

Descendants

edit

Macanese

edit

Etymology

edit

From Portuguese quatro.

Numeral

edit

quatro

  1. four (4)
    Coordinate terms: três, cinco

References

edit

Mirandese

edit

Etymology

edit

From Old Leonese quatro, from Latin quattuor, from Proto-Indo-European *kʷetwóres.

Numeral

edit

quatro

  1. four

Old Leonese

edit

Etymology

edit

From Latin quattuor.

Pronunciation

edit

Numeral

edit

quatro

  1. four
    • 1294, Document from Espinareda de la Vega[1]:
      Lunes quatro dias andados del mes de Jeneyro.
      Monday four days have gone by the month of January.

References

edit
  1. ^ Staaff, Erik (1907) Étude sur L’Ancien Dialecte Léonais d’après des Chartes du XIIIe Siècle, Heidelberg, page 167

Old Spanish

edit
Old Spanish cardinal numbers
 <  3 4 5  > 
    Cardinal : quatro
    Ordinal : quarto

Alternative forms

edit
  • iiij (representation in Roman numerals)

Etymology

edit

From Latin quattuor, from Proto-Italic *kʷettwōr, from Proto-Indo-European *kʷetwóres.

Pronunciation

edit

Numeral

edit

quatro

  1. four
    • c. 1200, Almerich, Fazienda de Ultramar, f. 63v:
      é dixom ami ppħza al ſp̃u aſſi diz el ſeñor dios de de [sic] quatro uenga ſpiritu e ſofle eneſtos matados. e. biuan.
      And he said to me, “Prophesy to the breath; ‘Thus says the Lord God: come from four [winds], o breath, and breathe into these slain, [that] they [may] live.’”
edit

Descendants

edit

Portuguese

edit
Portuguese numbers (edit)
40
 ←  3 4 5  → 
    Cardinal: quatro
    Ordinal: quarto
    Ordinal abbreviation: 4.º
    Multiplier: quádruplo
    Fractional: quarto
    Group: quarteto

Etymology

edit

From Old Galician-Portuguese quatro, from Latin quattuor, from Proto-Italic *kʷettwōr, from Proto-Indo-European *kʷetwóres.

Pronunciation

edit

  • Rhymes: -atɾu
  • Hyphenation: qua‧tro

Numeral

edit

quatro m or f

  1. four

Quotations

edit

For quotations using this term, see Citations:quatro.

Noun

edit

quatro m (plural quatros)

  1. four

Quotations

edit

For quotations using this term, see Citations:quatro.

Descendants

edit

See also

edit
Playing cards in Portuguese · cartas de baralho (layout · text)
             
ás dois, duque três, terno quatro, quadra cinco, quina seis, sena sete, bisca, manilha
             
oito nove dez valete dama rei jóquer, curinga

Spanish

edit

Numeral

edit

quatro

  1. Obsolete spelling of cuatro.

Venetian

edit

Etymology

edit

Inherited from Latin quattuor, from Proto-Italic *kʷettwōr, ultimately from Proto-Indo-European *kʷetwóres. Compare Italian quattro.

Numeral

edit

quatro

  1. four