passo
See also: passò
Catalan
Verb
passo
- first-person singular present indicative form of passar
Italian
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): [ˈpasso]
- Rhymes: -asso
Etymology 1
Noun
passo m (plural passi)
- footstep (sound)
- footprint
- step
- pace
- passage (of text)
- (film) gauge (film size)
- pitch (distance between evenly spaced objects)
- wheelbase
Derived terms
- due passi (“short distance”)
- passo carrabile
Verb
passo
- first-person singular present of passare
Etymology 2
Adjective
passo (feminine singular passa, masculine plural passi, feminine plural passe)
Derived terms
Anagrams
Latin
Participle
passō
References
- passo in Charles du Fresne du Cange’s Glossarium Mediæ et Infimæ Latinitatis (augmented edition, 1883–1887)
Portuguese
Etymology
From Old Portuguese passo, from Latin passus.
Pronunciation
Noun
passo m (plural passos)
- step; footstep; pace (movement made from one foot to the other)
- step; pace (a unit distance roughly equivalent to the distance covered in a step)
- step (very short distance)
- step; footstep (sound produced by stepping on the ground)
- (chiefly military, except in set phrases) pace (manner or speed of walking or marching)
- pace (the speed of a process)
- (dancing) the movements associated with a dance style
- step; stage; phase (distinct part of a process or protocol)
- (figuratively) step (an attempt in dealing with something)
- (geography) pass (narrow passage or channel between geographical features)
- (mechanical engineering) pitch (distance between a gear’s teeth)
- (mechanical engineering) pitch (distance between a screws’s threads)
Synonyms
Verb
passo
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