pitsa

Estonian

Etymology

Borrowed from Italian pizza.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /ˈpitsɑ/

Noun

pitsa (genitive pitsa, partitive pitsat)

  1. pizza

Derived terms

Declension


Faroese

Etymology

From Italian pizza, of uncertain origin, perhaps from Ancient Greek πίττα (pítta, cake, pie), from Ancient Greek πίσσα (píssa, pitch), Attic πίττα (pítta), from πεπτός (peptós, cooked) or from Lombardic pizza ("bit, bite"), or from Latin pinso (I beat, pound).

Noun

pitsa f (genitive singular pitsu, plural pitsur)

  1. pizza

Declension

Declension of pitsa
f1 singular plural
indefinite definite indefinite definite
nominative pitsa pitsan pitsur pitsurnar
accusative pitsu pitsuna pitsur pitsurnar
dative pitsu pitsuni pitsum pitsunum
genitive pitsu pitsunnar pitsa pitsanna

Finnish

Etymology

From Italian pizza with adapted spelling.

Noun

pitsa

  1. Alternative form of pizza

Usage notes

This is the standard spelling preferred by the Kotus (both forms are accepted), but pizza is more common.

Declension

Inflection of pitsa (Kotus type 9/kala, no gradation)
nominative pitsa pitsat
genitive pitsan pitsojen
partitive pitsaa pitsoja
illative pitsaan pitsoihin
singular plural
nominative pitsa pitsat
accusative nom. pitsa pitsat
gen. pitsan
genitive pitsan pitsojen
pitsainrare
partitive pitsaa pitsoja
inessive pitsassa pitsoissa
elative pitsasta pitsoista
illative pitsaan pitsoihin
adessive pitsalla pitsoilla
ablative pitsalta pitsoilta
allative pitsalle pitsoille
essive pitsana pitsoina
translative pitsaksi pitsoiksi
instructive pitsoin
abessive pitsatta pitsoitta
comitative pitsoineen

Anagrams


Uzbek

Etymology

Borrowed from Italian pizza.

Noun

pitsa (plural pitsalar)

  1. pizza

Declension

This article is issued from Wiktionary. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.