diabo
Appearance
See also: Diabo
Portuguese
Alternative forms
Etymology
Inherited from Old Galician-Portuguese diaboo, displacing the collateral forms diabre, diabro and diablo, from Ecclesiastical Latin, Late Latin diabolus (“devil”) (probably borrowed as a semi-learned term), itself from Ancient Greek διάβολος (diábolos, “slanderer”). Doublet of diabolô and diábolo.
Pronunciation
Noun
diabo m (plural diabos)
- (religion, fiction) devil; demon; fiend (creature from Hell)
- (colloquial, with definite article) used to emphasise the extent of an action, usually one of a negative nature
- Ele falou o diabo sobre seus inimigos.
- He said a lot of crap about his enemies.
Noun
diabo m (plural diabos, feminine diaba or diáboa, feminine plural diabas or diáboas)
- an evil or perverse person
- a mischievous person
Derived terms
- diabalma
- diabão (augmentative)
- diabinho (diminutive)
- diabo-da-tasmânia
- diabo-marinho
- diabozinho (diminutive)
- diabrete (diminutive)
- o que diabos
- peixe-diabo
- por que diabos
- que diabo
- que diabos
Related terms
Descendants
- Kadiwéu: diaabo
Interjection
diabo!
Usage notes
- Thought to be more blasphemous in the Portugal whilst less blasphemous in the Brazil, Angola and Moçambique.
Categories:
- Portuguese terms inherited from Old Galician-Portuguese
- Portuguese terms derived from Old Galician-Portuguese
- Portuguese terms borrowed from Ecclesiastical Latin
- Portuguese terms derived from Ecclesiastical Latin
- Portuguese terms borrowed from Late Latin
- Portuguese terms derived from Late Latin
- Portuguese terms derived from Ancient Greek
- Portuguese doublets
- Portuguese 3-syllable words
- Portuguese 2-syllable words
- Portuguese terms with IPA pronunciation
- Rhymes:Portuguese/abu
- Rhymes:Portuguese/abu/3 syllables
- Portuguese terms with homophones
- Portuguese lemmas
- Portuguese nouns
- Portuguese countable nouns
- Portuguese masculine nouns
- pt:Religion
- pt:Fiction
- Portuguese colloquialisms
- Portuguese terms with usage examples
- Portuguese interjections
- Portuguese offensive terms