ute

See also: Ute and -ute

English

Etymology

Contraction of utility vehicle.

Pronunciation

  • yo͞ot
  • IPA(key): /juːt/
  • (file)
  • Rhymes: -uːt

Noun

ute (plural utes)

  1. (Australia, New Zealand) A small vehicle based on the same platform as a family car but with a unibody construction and a built-in open tray area for carrying goods; similar but not identical to a pick-up truck.
    • 2007, Sheryl Persson, The Royal Flying Doctor Service of Australia, Exisle Publishing, Australia, page 40,
      The Reverend John Flynn, a man of simple tastes, was always recognisable in the outback, dressed in a suit, driving an old ute and puffing on a pipe.
    • 2008, Penelope Adams, Why Women Are Stupid, Lulu, page 105,
      Still, given the choice between being stuck behind a ute in tropical scenery and spending four to five hours driving through stretches of semi-desert, I′d rather have the ute-plus-heart-attack.
    • 2009, Damian Veltri, Bandt, Louis (Lewis) Thornett (1910-1987), entry in Dianne Lingmore, Darryl Bennet (editors), Australian Dictionary of Biography, Volume 17 1981-1990: A-K, page 55,
      A sample body was made in 1933 and the first utilities, or ‘utes’, rolled off the production line next year. Dubbed ‘the Kangaroo Chaser’ by Henry Ford when Bandt displayed two examples in Detroit, United States of America, in 1935, the ute was quickly recognised as the ideal farmers′ vehicle.

See also

Translations

Anagrams


Chuukese

Etymology

u- + -te

Pronoun

ute

  1. I will never
  2. so I do not
Present and past tense Negative tense Future Negative future Distant future Negative determinate
Singular First person uauseupweusapupwapute
Second person ka, kekose, kesekopwe, kepwekosap, kesapkopwap, kepwapkote, kete
Third person aeseepweesapepwapete
PluralFirst person aua (exclusive)
sia (inclusive)
ause (exclusive)
sise (inclusive)
aupwe (exclusive)
sipwe (inclusive)
ausap (exclusive)
sisap (inclusive)
aupwap (exclusive)
sipwap (inclusive)
aute (exclusive)
site (inclusive)
Second person ouaouseoupweousapoupwapoute
Third person ra, rereserepweresaprepwaprete

Norwegian Bokmål

Etymology

From Old Norse úti

Pronunciation

Adverb

ute

  1. outdoors
  2. out; the state of being out. compare: ut
    ute av kontroll - out of control
  3. uncool; "old-fashioned"

Derived terms

References


Norwegian Nynorsk

Etymology

From Old Norse úti

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /²ʉːtə/

Adverb

ute

  1. outdoors
  2. out; the state of being out. compare: ut
    ute av kontroll - out of control
  3. uncool; "old-fashioned"

Derived terms

References


Old English

Etymology

From earlier *ūtē, from Northwest Germanic *ūtē, from Proto-Germanic *ūtai.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /ˈuːte/

Adverb

ūte

  1. outside, outdoors
    Iċ lēt þā wæsċe ūte drūgian.
    I let the laundry dry outside.
    Wē slēpon ūte under steorrum.
    We slept outside under the stars.
  2. at a distance, out
    ūte on sǣ
    out at sea

Swedish

Pronunciation

  • (file)

Adverb

ute

  1. outdoors

Adjective

ute

  1. out; the state of being out. compare: ut
  2. uncool; "old-fashioned"
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