abada

See also: abadá and Abadã

English

Etymology

From Portuguese abada (female rhinoceros), from Malay badaq (rhinoceros).

Noun

abada (plural abadas)

  1. (obsolete) The rhinoceros.
  2. (mythology) A herbivorous mythological creature of the Central African Congo, similar to the unicorn. Its horns are said to be an antidote to poisons, and it has brown fur, two crooked horns and a boar's tail.
    • 1864, William Winwood Reade, Savage Africa (page 373)
      It is certain that the unicorn is not to be confounded with the abada, about which they usually dispute; this one may see by the difference of their names, as well as by the difference of their body and parts []

Anagrams


Bambara

Noun

abada

  1. eternity

Adverb

abada

  1. always, forever

French

Pronunciation

Verb

abada

  1. third-person singular past historic of abader

Galician

Etymology

From aba (apron) + -ada.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /aˈβaða̝/

Noun

abada f (plural abadas)

  1. quantity contained in a apron or in the folds of a shirt

References


    Ibaloi

    Noun

    abada

    1. (anatomy) shoulder

    Italian

    Etymology

    From Portuguese abada (female rhinoceros), from a bada (the rhinoceros), with concretion of the definite article.

    Pronunciation

    • IPA(key): /aˈba.da/
    • Stress: abàda
    • Hyphenation: a‧ba‧da

    Noun

    abada m (plural abadi) abada f (plural abade)

    1. Alternative form of bada (rhinoceros)

    Portuguese

    Noun

    abada f (plural abadas)

    1. Alternative form of bada (rhinoceros)

    Descendants


    Spanish

    Etymology

    Portuguese abada

    Noun

    abada f (plural abadas)

    1. (obsolete) rhinoceros
      Synonym: rinoceronte

    Further reading


    Turkish

    Noun

    abada

    1. locative singular of aba
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