navo - Wiktionary, the free dictionary
From Wiktionary, the free dictionary
navo (accusative singular navon, plural navoj, accusative plural navojn)
- (architecture) nave (the middle or body of a church)
- transepto (“transept”)
Borrowed from English nave, French nef and navire, Italian nave, Spanish nave, ultimately from Latin nāvis.
navo (plural navi)
- (nautical) ship
- Synonym: batelo
- (architecture) nave
- aeronavo (“airship, dirigible”)
- exkursonavo
- kombatonavo (“ship of the line”)
- komerconavo (“merchant ship”)
- konvoynavo (“convoy ship”)
- korsaronavo (“privateer”)
- kurasonavo (“battleship, ironclad”)
- kurieronavo (“mailboat”)
- militonavo (“warship”)
- navala (“naval, nautical”)
- navana (“nautical, seafaring”)
- navano (“sailor, mariner”)
- navaro (“fleet, armada”)
- navestro (“skipper, shipmaster, ship's captain”)
- naveto (“shuttle”)
- navoliteto (“berth”)
- seglonavo (“keelboat”)
- spaconavo (“spaceship”)
- submersonavo (“submarine”)
- tartan-navo (“tartan”)
- transportonavo (“transport-ship, storeship”)
- vaporonavo (“steamboat, steamship”)
- varonavo (“storeship, merchant ship”)
- nëvok (Western Kata-viri)
From Proto-Nuristani *napāka, from Proto-Indo-Iranian *nápāts, from Proto-Indo-European *népōts.
navo (Kamviri)[1]
From nāvus (“diligent, busy”) + -o.
- (Classical Latin) IPA(key): /ˈnaː.u̯oː/, [ˈnäːu̯oː]
- (modern Italianate Ecclesiastical) IPA(key): /ˈna.vo/, [ˈnäːvo]
nāvō (present infinitive nāvāre, perfect active nāvāvī, supine nāvātum); first conjugation
- to do or accomplish enthusiastically; to pursue a course of action with zeal
- “navo”, in Charlton T. Lewis and Charles Short (1879) A Latin Dictionary, Oxford: Clarendon Press
- “navo”, in Charlton T. Lewis (1891) An Elementary Latin Dictionary, New York: Harper & Brothers
- "navo", in Charles du Fresne du Cange’s Glossarium Mediæ et Infimæ Latinitatis (augmented edition with additions by D. P. Carpenterius, Adelungius and others, edited by Léopold Favre, 1883–1887)
- navo in Gaffiot, Félix (1934) Dictionnaire illustré latin-français, Hachette.
- Carl Meißner, Henry William Auden (1894) Latin Phrase-Book[2], London: Macmillan and Co.
- (ambiguous) to build a ship, a fleet: navem, classem aedificare, facere, efficere, instituere
- (ambiguous) to equip a boat, a fleet: navem (classem) armare, ornare, instruere
- (ambiguous) to launch a boat: navem deducere (vid. sect. XII. 1, note Notice too...)
- (ambiguous) to haul up a boat: navem subducere (in aridum)
- (ambiguous) to repair a boat: navem reficere
- (ambiguous) to embark: navem conscendere, ascendere
- (ambiguous) to embark an army: exercitum in naves imponere (Liv. 22. 19)
- (ambiguous) ships of last year: naves annotinae
- (ambiguous) to weigh anchor, sail: navem (naves) solvere
- (ambiguous) the ships sail from the harbour: naves ex portu solvunt
- (ambiguous) to row: navem remis agere or propellere
- (ambiguous) to row hard: navem remis concitare, incitare
- (ambiguous) to back water: navem retro inhibere (Att. 13. 21)
- (ambiguous) to land (of people): appellere navem (ad terram, litus)
- (ambiguous) to make fast boats to anchors: naves ad ancoras deligare (B. G. 4. 29)
- (ambiguous) to make fast boats to anchors: naves (classem) constituere (in alto)
- (ambiguous) to clear for action: navem expedire
- (ambiguous) to charge, ram a boat: navem rostro percutere
- (ambiguous) to board and capture a boat: navem expugnare
- (ambiguous) to sink a ship, a fleet: navem, classem deprimere, mergere
- (ambiguous) to throw grappling irons on board; to board: copulas, manus ferreas (in navem) inicere
- (ambiguous) to throw grappling irons on board; to board: in navem (hostium) transcendere
- (ambiguous) to capture a boat: navem capere, intercipere, deprehendere
- (ambiguous) to build a ship, a fleet: navem, classem aedificare, facere, efficere, instituere