sae

See also: Sae, SAE, saé, säe, -sae, sa'e, , and

Galician

Verb

sae

  1. third-person singular present indicative of saír
  2. second-person singular imperative of saír

Ingrian

Noun

sae

  1. precipitation (hail, rain, snow)

Portuguese

Verb

sae

  1. Obsolete spelling of sai

Scots

Etymology

From Middle English so, swo, zuo, swa, swe, from Old English swā, swǣ, swē (so, as, the same, such, that), from Proto-Germanic *swa, *swē (so), from Proto-Indo-European *swē, *swō (reflexive pronomial stem). Cognate with English so (so), West Frisian sa (so), Low German so (so), Dutch zo (so), German so (so), Danish (so), Norwegian Nynorsk so, Old Latin suad (so), Albanian sa (how much, so, as), Ancient Greek ὡς (hōs, as).

Conjunction

sae

  1. so

Adverb

sae (not comparable)

  1. so

Zhuang

Pronunciation

Etymology 1

From Chinese (, “snail”).

Noun

sae (old orthography , Sawndip forms 𬠂, , 西)

  1. snail

Etymology 2

From Chinese 西 (, “west”).

Noun

sae (old orthography )

  1. west

Etymology 3

From Chinese (shī, “teacher; master”).

Noun

sae (old orthography )

  1. master; expert
  2. apprenticeship
  3. shaman
  4. shaman song and dance

Adjective

sae (old orthography )

  1. skilled at; proficient in

Etymology 4

From Chinese (, “to neigh”).

Verb

sae (old orthography , Sawndip forms )

  1. to neigh
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