pepa

See also: Pepa and pêpa

Hawaiian

Etymology 1

Borrowed from English paper.

Noun

pepa

  1. paper
  2. card

Etymology 2

Borrowed from English pepper.

Noun

pepa

  1. pepper

Italian

Verb

pepa

  1. inflection of pepare:
    1. third-person singular present indicative
    2. second-person singular imperative

Maori

Etymology

Borrowed from English paper.

Noun

pepa

  1. paper

Marshallese

Alternative forms

Etymology

Borrowed from English pepper, from Middle English peper, piper, from Old English piper, from West Germanic *piper, from Latin piper, from an Indo-Aryan source.

Pronunciation

  • (phonetic) IPA(key): [pʲɛbʲɑ]
  • (phonemic) IPA(key): /pʲɛpʲæɰ/
  • Bender phonemes: {pepah}

Noun

pepa

  1. pepper (Piperaceae)
  2. a pepper (Capsicum)

References


Niuean

Etymology

From English paper.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /ˈpe.pa/, [ˈpɛpə]
  • Hyphenation: pe‧pa

Noun

pepa

  1. paper

Rotokas

Etymology

Borrowed from Tok Pisin pepa, from English paper.

Noun

pepa

  1. paper

References


Spanish

Etymology

See pepita

Noun

pepa f (plural pepas)

  1. (Latin America) pip, stone (seed inside fruits)
  2. (Latin America) pepita, certain large edible seeds e.g. sunflower seed
    Synonym: pepita
  3. nugget (small piece of metal especially gold)
    Synonym: pepita
  4. (Latin America, slang) pill (recreational drug in pill-form especially amphetamine)
  5. (Latin America, slang) clitoris

Further reading


Tok Pisin

Etymology 1

From English pepper.

Noun

pepa

  1. pepper

Etymology 2

From English paper.

Noun

pepa

  1. paper
  2. document
  3. newspaper
Derived terms
  • pekpek pepa (toilet paper)
Descendants
  • Rotokas: pepa
This article is issued from Wiktionary. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.