nutria

See also: nutría, nútria, and nutrią

English

Etymology

From Spanish nutria (otter), from Latin lutra.

Noun

nutria (countable and uncountable, plural nutrias)

  1. (chiefly Canada, US) The coypu, Myocastor coypus.
  2. The fur of the coypu.

Descendants

  • Japanese: ヌートリア (nūtoria)
  • Korean: 뉴트리아 (nyuteuria)

Translations

Anagrams


Danish

Noun

nutria

  1. coypu, nutria
    • 1964, Aage Aagesen, Sydamerika
      På pampaen findes bl. a. bæltedyr, opossum, nandu, stinkdyr og hjorte. Ved vandløbene er nutriaen hyppig.
  2. the fur thereof
    • 1957, Aage Dons, De åbne arme, Lindhardt og Ringhof (→ISBN)
      Under Nutriaen bar hun en smaablomstret Silke imprimé Kjole,[sic] ...
      Under the nutria, she wore a ? with small flowers on it, ...

Finnish

Noun

nutria

  1. coypu

Declension

Inflection of nutria (Kotus type 12/kulkija, no gradation)
nominative nutria nutriat
genitive nutrian nutrioiden
nutrioitten
partitive nutriaa nutrioita
illative nutriaan nutrioihin
singular plural
nominative nutria nutriat
accusative nom. nutria nutriat
gen. nutrian
genitive nutrian nutrioiden
nutrioitten
nutriainrare
partitive nutriaa nutrioita
inessive nutriassa nutrioissa
elative nutriasta nutrioista
illative nutriaan nutrioihin
adessive nutrialla nutrioilla
ablative nutrialta nutrioilta
allative nutrialle nutrioille
essive nutriana nutrioina
translative nutriaksi nutrioiksi
instructive nutrioin
abessive nutriatta nutrioitta
comitative nutrioineen

Anagrams


Italian

Pronunciation

  • Rhymes: -utria

Noun

nutria f (plural nutrie)

  1. coypu, nutria

Synonyms

Anagrams


Polish

nutria

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /ˈnut.rʲja/
  • (file)

Noun

nutria f

  1. coypu, Myocastor coypus

Declension


Portuguese

Verb

nutria

  1. first-person singular (eu) imperfect indicative of nutrir
  2. third-person singular (ele and ela, also used with você and others) imperfect indicative of nutrir

Spanish

Alternative forms

Etymology

From Vulgar Latin *nutria or *lutria / *lutrea, from Latin lutra, from Proto-Italic *utrā, from Proto-Indo-European *udréh₂, the feminine form of *udrós, from the root *wed-. The Spanish word, preserving the -t-, may have arrived through the intermediate of either Mozarabic or more likely a Southern Italian language or dialect: cf. Salerno dialect (of Neapolitan) nùtria, Calabrian ùtria and lùtria, utre in Basilicata, etc. The Vulgar Latin form was likely influenced by Ancient Greek ἐνυδρίς (enudrís)[1]. Compare also Catalan llúdria, Portuguese lontra.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /ˈnutɾja/

Noun

nutria f (plural nutrias)

  1. otter
  2. (Spain) nutria, coypu

Synonyms

Descendants

  • Belarusian: нутрыя (nutryja)
  • Czech: nutrie
  • → English: nutria
    • Japanese: ヌートリア (nūtoria)
    • Korean: 뉴트리아 (nyuteuria)
  • Finnish: nutria
  • German: Nutria
  • Italian: nutria
  • Lithuanian: nutrija
  • Macedonian: нутрија (nutrija)
  • Polish: nutria
  • Portuguese: nútria
  • Russian: нутрия (nutrija)
  • Slovak: nutria
  • Ukrainian: нутрія (nutrija)

References

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