See also: Sinto, and sintó

Carpathian Romani

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Noun

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sinto m

  1. (Gurvari, Hungarian Vend, Romungro) Sinto man

Derived terms

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References

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  • sinto” in Gurvari Romani-English Dictionary, ROMLEX – the Romani Lexicon Project, 2000.
  • sinto” in Hungarian Vend Romani-English Dictionary, ROMLEX – the Romani Lexicon Project, 2000.
  • sinto” in Romungro Romani-English Dictionary, ROMLEX – the Romani Lexicon Project, 2000.

Cebuano

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Cebuano numbers (edit)
1,000
 ←  90  ←  99 100 200  → [a], [b] 1,000  → 
10
    Cardinal: usá ka gatós, gatós
    Spanish cardinal: sinto, siyénto, siyén

Alternative forms

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Etymology

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From Spanish ciento, from Latin centum, from Proto-Indo-European *ḱm̥tóm.

Pronunciation

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  • Hyphenation: sin‧to

Numeral

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sinto

  1. one hundred

Esperanto

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Etymology

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Clipping of sintezilo (synthesizer).

Pronunciation

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Noun

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sinto (accusative singular sinton, plural sintoj, accusative plural sintojn)

  1. (slang) synth

Galician

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Verb

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sinto

  1. first-person singular present indicative of sentir
  2. (reintegrationist norm) first-person singular present indicative of sentir

Mogum

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Noun

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sinto

  1. brother

References

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Portuguese

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Pronunciation

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Verb

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sinto

  1. first-person singular present indicative of sentir

Sinte Romani

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Noun

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sinto m

  1. Sinto man

Derived terms

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References

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  • sinto” in Sinte Romani-English Dictionary, ROMLEX – the Romani Lexicon Project, 2000.

Venetan

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Etymology

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Ultimately from Sinte Romani sinto.

Noun

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sinto m (plural sinti)

  1. gipsy

Vlax Romani

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Noun

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sinto m

  1. (Gurbet, Kalderaš, Lovara) Sinto man

Derived terms

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References

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  • sinto” in Gurbet Romani-English Dictionary, ROMLEX – the Romani Lexicon Project, 2000.
  • sinto” in Kalderaš Romani-English Dictionary, ROMLEX – the Romani Lexicon Project, 2000.
  • sinto” in Lovara Romani-English Dictionary, ROMLEX – the Romani Lexicon Project, 2000.