πλατεία

See also: πλατεῖα

Ancient Greek

Pronunciation

 

Adjective

πλᾰτείᾱ (plateíā)

  1. nominative accusative and vocative dual feminine of πλᾰτύς (platús)



Greek

Etymology

From feminine adjective of Ancient Greek πλατεῖα (wide) (by ellipsis of the noun ὁδός (hodós): "wide street") of πλατύς (platús, wide).[1]

  1. (town square) Twice-borrowed from French place from Latin platea from Ancient Greek πλατεῖα (plateîa) of πλατύς (platús).
  2. (theater stalls) Twice-borrowed from Italian platea from Latin platea from Ancient Greek plural neuter πλατέα (platéa) of πλατύς (platús).

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /plaˈti.a/
  • (file)
  • Hyphenation: πλα‧τεί‧α
  • Compare to πλατιά (platiá)

Noun

πλατεία (plateía) f (plural πλατείες)

  1. town square
  2. (theater) the place with seats in front and about the same level as the stage
  3. (theater, by extension) people in these seats

Declension

Derived terms

  • πλατεΐτσα f (plateḯtsa) (diminutive)
  • πλατειούλα f (plateioúla) (diminutive)
  • πλατειάζω (plateiázo, expatiate, descant, expound)
  • πλατειασμός m (plateiasmós, descant)
  • πλάτεμα n (plátema, widening)

Adjective

πλατεία (plateía)

  1. Monotonic form of the Katharevousa πλατεῖα (plateῖa), Nominative and vocative singular feminine form of πλατύς (platýs).: wide

References

  1. πλατεία in Λεξικό της κοινής νεοελληνικής [Dictionary of Standard Modern Greek], 1998, by the "Triantafyllidis" Foundation.
This article is issued from Wiktionary. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.