tutti

See also: Tutti

English

Etymology

From Italian tutti, from Latin totus (all).

Adverb

tutti (not comparable)

  1. (music) All together. Indicates that the remainder of a group should join in playing after a solo or other passage with a reduced number of voices.

Adjective

tutti (not comparable)

  1. (music) All together; with all playing at once.
    a tutti passage

Noun

tutti (plural tuttis)

  1. (music) A passage in which all members of an orchestra are playing
    • 2008 February 19, Steve Smith, “Hispanic Classics Flavor a New York Debut”, in New York Times:
      Even so, the orchestra endowed tuttis with a positively radiant glow.

Finnish

(index tu)

Etymology

From Swedish tutt.

Noun

tutti

  1. A pacifier; binky (US), dummy (UK), soother (Canada).
  2. A teat (artificial nipple used for bottle-feeding infants).

Declension

Inflection of tutti (Kotus type 5/risti, tt-t gradation)
nominative tutti tutit
genitive tutin tuttien
partitive tuttia tutteja
illative tuttiin tutteihin
singular plural
nominative tutti tutit
accusative nom. tutti tutit
gen. tutin
genitive tutin tuttien
partitive tuttia tutteja
inessive tutissa tuteissa
elative tutista tuteista
illative tuttiin tutteihin
adessive tutilla tuteilla
ablative tutilta tuteilta
allative tutille tuteille
essive tuttina tutteina
translative tutiksi tuteiksi
instructive tutein
abessive tutitta tuteitta
comitative tutteineen

Derived terms

Anagrams


French

Etymology

From Italian tutti.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /tu.ti/

Noun

tutti m (plural tutti)

  1. (music) tutti

Further reading


Italian

Pronunciation

  • (file)

Pronoun

tutti m pl (tutte, f)

  1. all; everybody, everyone

Adjective

tutti

  1. masculine plural of tutto
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