suot
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Cebuano[edit]
Pronunciation[edit]
- Hyphenation: su‧ot
Verb[edit]
suot
- to force one's way through a crowd; to elbow
- (of a cut of pork) containing a greater amount of lean meat over the fatty part
Quotations[edit]
- For quotations using this term, see Citations:suot.
Finnish[edit]
Etymology 1[edit]
Noun[edit]
suot
- nominative plural of suo
Etymology 2[edit]
Verb[edit]
suot
Anagrams[edit]
Tagalog[edit]
Alternative forms[edit]
Etymology[edit]
From Proto-Philippine *suq(ə)lút. Compare Botolan Sambal holot, Kapampangan sulud, Bikol Central sulot, Cebuano sul-ot, and Maranao solot.
Pronunciation[edit]
Noun[edit]
suót (Baybayin spelling ᜐᜓᜂᜆ᜔)
- clothing; clothes; what one is wearing
- entry into somewhere extremely tight or narrow (such as a hole, small opening, thick forest, etc.)
- insertion into a hole (as into the eye of a needle)
- Synonyms: sulot, pagsusulot
- wearing of clothes, footwear, eyeglasses, etc.
- Synonym: pagsusuot
Derived terms[edit]
Adjective[edit]
suót (Baybayin spelling ᜐᜓᜂᜆ᜔)
Further reading[edit]
- “suot”, in Pambansang Diksiyonaryo | Diksiyonaryo.ph, Manila, 2018
Categories:
- Cebuano lemmas
- Cebuano verbs
- Finnish non-lemma forms
- Finnish noun forms
- Finnish verb forms
- Tagalog terms inherited from Proto-Philippine
- Tagalog terms derived from Proto-Philippine
- Tagalog 2-syllable words
- Tagalog terms with IPA pronunciation
- Tagalog lemmas
- Tagalog nouns
- Tagalog terms with Baybayin script
- Tagalog adjectives