foce

Italian

Etymology

From Late Latin or Vulgar Latin focem, a popular variant of faucem, a word form of Latin fauces (throat). Cognate with Italian fauce, which is borrowed from Latin whereas foce is inherited (doublets). Cognates include Occitan foz, Portuguese foz, Spanish hoz. [1]

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /ˈfo.t͡ʃe/
  • Rhymes: -otʃe

Noun

foce f (plural foci)

  1. mouth (of a river)
    Synonym: bocca (rare)

Derived terms

  • foce a delta (delta)
  • foce a estuario (estuary)

See also

References

  1. “foce” in: Alberto Nocentini, Alessandro Parenti, “l'Etimologico — Vocabolario della lingua italiana”, Le Monnier, 2010, →ISBN

Latin

Noun

foce

  1. vocative singular of focus

Polish

Noun

foce f

  1. dative singular of foka
  2. locative singular of foka
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