rets

English

Verb

rets

  1. Third-person singular simple present indicative form of ret

Anagrams


Catalan

Verb

rets

  1. second-person singular present indicative form of retre

Danish

Noun

rets c

  1. indefinite genitive singular of ret

French

Etymology

From Old French reiz, rez, rei (with spelling re-Latinized in modern French), from Latin rēte, rētis.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /ʁɛ/

Noun

rets m pl (plural only)

  1. (hunting, figuratively) snare
  2. (fishing) net

Derived terms


Latvian

Alternative forms

Etymology

From Proto-Baltic *retas, from Proto-Indo-European *er-, *(e)re- (loose, sparse, rare; to break down, to fall to pieces) (whence also irt (to disintegrate, to fall apart), q.v.) with an extra suffix -to-s. A parallel form from the same stem with a suffix -dʰ (*redʰ-) led to Old Church Slavonic рѣдъкъ (rědъkъ), Russian редкий (redkij), and to Latvian dialectal rēds. Cognates include Lithuanian rẽtas[1]

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): [ɾæts]

Adjective

rets (definite retais, comparative retāks, superlative visretākais, adverb reti)

  1. thin, sparse (formed of a number of similar elements placed at a relatively large distance from one another)
    rets priedulājsthin, sparse pine forest
    mežs bija pietiekami retsthe forest was rather thin, sparse
    reti matithin hair
    reta ķemmewide-tooth(ed) (lit. thin, sparse) comb
  2. sparse (not close to one another)
    grābeklis ar retiem zariemrake with rare, sparse prongs
    reti kokisparse trees
  3. (of fabric, cloth) thin (with gaps, spaces between the threads)
    reta auduma maisiņšlittle sack of thin cloth (= having gaps)
  4. (of gazes, fog, air, etc.) thin (not concentrated)
    rets kalnu gaissthin mountain air
    migla kļuva retāka un caurspīdīgākathe mist became thinner and more transparent
  5. (of groups of people) thin (having few members)
    viņu rindas bija kļuvušas retākastheir lines, ranks had become thinner
  6. rare (of which there is only a small number)
    reti augirare plants
    retie ķīmiskie elementi, metālirare chemical elements, metals
    retas rokrakstu grāmatasrare manuscript books
  7. rare, infrequent, uncommon (not widely known, distributed, used)
    rets vārdu savienojumsrare, uncommon word combination
    rets izteiciensrare expression
    reta tautasdziesmas melodijarare folk tune
  8. rare, uncommon (not normal, not ordinary)
    Ubāns ir viens no tiem retajiem māksliniekiem, kurš spēj atklāt skatītājam savu pasauliUbāns is one of those rare artists who are able to open their world to the viewer
  9. (definite forms) rare one(s) (only a few, not many)
    viņa piederēja pie tiem retajiem, kas prot klausītiesshe belonged to (those) rare (people) who know how to listen
    mums varoņu daudz... vien retajam uzcelts pieminekliswe have many heroes... ony to a rare one (= a few) a monument is built
  10. rare, infrequent (repeated only after long intervals)
    pa retamrarely
    rets gadījumsrare case
    retajos brīvajos vakaros māte mums lasījain the rare free evenings mother used to read to us
  11. rare (which appears, happens infrequently)
    reti viesirare guests
    labs draugs ir reta manta pasaulēa good friend is a rare treasure on earth

Declension

Synonyms

Antonyms

  • (of "thin", "sparse", "not dense", "with gaps or spaces"): blīvs, biezs
  • (of "rare"): biežs

Derived terms

References

  1. Karulis, Konstantīns (1992), rets”, in Latviešu Etimoloģijas Vārdnīca (in Latvian), Rīga: AVOTS, ISBN 9984-700-12-7

Old Prussian

Adjective

rets m

  1. rare, thin
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