stuba

Italian

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /ˈstu.ba/
  • Rhymes: -uba
  • Hyphenation: stù‧ba

Verb

stuba

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

Old High German

Etymology

From Proto-Germanic *stubō (room, sitting room, oven), possibly from Vulgar Latin *extūfa, *extūfāre (to heat with steam), from Latin ex- + *tūfus (hot vapor), from Ancient Greek τῦφος (tûphos, fever).[1]

Cognate with Old English stofu (bathroom), Old Norse stofa (room, living room), Dutch stoof (heated room; bathroom; stew).

Noun

stuba f

  1. a heated room
  2. bathroom

Descendants

  • Middle High German: stube
    • Alemannic German: Schtube, Schtub, Stube
      Swabian:
    • Bavarian:
    • Central Franconian:
      Luxembourgish: Stuff
    • East Central German:
      Erzgebirgisch: [ˈʂʈuːp]
      Upper Saxon:
      Vilamovian: śtuw
    • East Franconian:
    • German: Stube
    • Rhine Franconian: Stubb, Stobb, Stoob, Stow, Stuw
      Frankfurterisch: [ʃd̥up]
    • Yiddish: שטיבל (shtibl), שטוב (shtub)
    • Serbo-Croatian: soba
    • Slovene: soba
    • Hungarian: szoba
    • (uncertain) Proto-Slavic: *jьstъbà

References

  1. stove”, in The American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language, 5th edition, Boston, Mass.: Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, 2016, →ISBN.

Serbo-Croatian

Etymology

From Proto-Slavic *stъlba, from Proto-Indo-European *stl̥b-.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /stûba/
  • Hyphenation: stu‧ba

Noun

stȕba f (Cyrillic spelling сту̏ба)

  1. stair
  2. (figurative) milestone

Declension

Synonyms

Derived terms

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