patt

See also: Patt

English

Noun

patt

  1. (knitting) Abbreviation of pattern.
    • 2008, Claire Compton, Sue Whiting, The Knitting and Crochet Bible (page 305)
      Cont in patt until work measures 10cm (4in). Break off B and join in C.

Anagrams


Estonian

Etymology 1

From Proto-Finnic *patto. Cognate to Votic pattu (sin), dialectal Finnish patto (crime) and Karelian patto (evil, mad).

Noun

patt (genitive patu, partitive pattu)

  1. sin
Declension

Etymology 2

Ultimately from Italian patta (stalemate [in chess]).

Noun

patt (genitive pati, partitive patti)

  1. (chess) stalemate - position where a player has no legal moves, but the king is not mate, resulting in a remis (draw)
Declension

German

Etymology

Borrowed from French pat.

Pronunciation

  • (file)

Adjective

patt (strong nominative masculine singular patter, not comparable)

  1. (chess) in stalemate (said of a situation where one player is not in check but still has no legal move)
  2. deadlocked

Derived terms

  • patt setzen

Further reading

  • patt” in Duden online
  • patt” in Digitales Wörterbuch der deutschen Sprache

Icelandic

Etymology

From Danish pat, from German patt, from Italian patto.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /pʰaht/
  • Rhymes: -aht

Adjective

patt (indeclinable)

  1. (chess) in a state of stalemate; not able to move any piece without compromising the king

Noun

patt n (genitive singular patts, no plural)

  1. (chess) stalemate

Declension

Synonyms

  • (stalemate): pattstaða

Maltese

Etymology

Borrowed from Sicilian pattu and/or Italian patto, from Latin pactum.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /pat/

Noun

patt m (plural pattijiet)

  1. pact, agreement

Swedish

Noun

patt c

  1. (chess) stalemate
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