sasso
See also: Sasso
Istriot
[edit]Etymology
[edit]Ultimately from Latin saxum. Compare Italian sasso.
Noun
[edit]sasso m (plural sassi)
Italian
[edit]Etymology
[edit]From Classical Latin saxum, from Proto-Italic *saksom, of unknown origin. Compare Portuguese seixo (“pebble”) and Spanish saxo (“stone”).
Pronunciation
[edit]Noun
[edit]sasso m (plural sassi or (obsolete) sassa f)
- (geology) stone, rock
- Synonym: pietra
- (by extension) stone, rock, boulder, pebble
- 1350s, anonymous author, “Prologo e primo capitolo [Preface and first chapter]”, in Cronica [Chronicle][1] (overall work in Old Italian); republished as Giuseppe Porta, editor, Anonimo romano - Cronica, Adelphi, 1979, →ISBN:
- le memorie se facevano con scoiture in sassi e pataffii, […] [e] queste sassa fonnavano in quelle locora dove le cose fatte erano, in segno de perpetua memoria.
- memoirs were made through incisions on rocks, and epitaphs, […] and these rocks were placed in those locations where things had taken place, as a sign of perpetual remembrance.
Derived terms
[edit]Japanese
[edit]Romanization
[edit]sasso
Categories:
- Istriot terms inherited from Latin
- Istriot terms derived from Latin
- Istriot lemmas
- Istriot nouns
- Istriot masculine nouns
- Italian terms inherited from Classical Latin
- Italian terms derived from Classical Latin
- Italian terms inherited from Proto-Italic
- Italian terms derived from Proto-Italic
- Italian 2-syllable words
- Italian terms with IPA pronunciation
- Rhymes:Italian/asso
- Rhymes:Italian/asso/2 syllables
- Italian terms with audio pronunciation
- Italian lemmas
- Italian nouns
- Italian countable nouns
- Italian nouns that change gender in the plural
- Italian nouns with multiple plurals
- Italian masculine nouns
- it:Geology
- Italian terms with quotations
- Japanese non-lemma forms
- Japanese romanizations