evo

See also: Evo, evő, and -evo

Ido

Etymology

Borrowed from Latin aevum.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /ˈevo/

Noun

evo (plural evi)

  1. age, years

Derived terms

  •  evar (to be so many years old; to be aged)

Italian

Etymology

From Latin aevum, from earlier aevom, from Old Latin aivom, from Proto-Italic *aiwom (period”, “age), from Proto-Indo-European *h₂óyu (long time”, “lifetime), from the root *h₂ey- (vital force”, “life”, “age”, “eternity).

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /ˈɛ.vo/, [ˈɛːvo]
  • Stress: èvo
  • Hyphenation: e‧vo

Noun

evo m (plural evi)

  1. era
  2. long period of time

Anagrams


Serbo-Croatian

Interjection

ȅvo (Cyrillic spelling е̏во) (+ genitive case when referring to objects)

  1. look, see, behold
    Evo! Uradio sam! (spoken by a male)
    Evo! Uradila sam! (spoken by a female)
    There! I did it!
    Evo moje mačke!Here's my cat!
  2. here, there
  3. over here, over there

References

  • evo” in Hrvatski jezični portal

Slovene

Interjection

evo

  1. look, see, behold
  2. there, there you go

Spanish

Etymology

From Latin aevum, from Proto-Indo-European *h₂eyu- (vital force).

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /ˈebo/, [ˈeβo]

Noun

evo m (plural evos)

  1. (poetic) eternity

Derived terms

Further reading

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