mestre
Portuguese
/ˈmɛʃ.tɾɨ/, /ˈmɛʃ.tɾi/
noun
Definitions
- master
Etymology
Inherited from Old Portuguese meestre borrowed from Old Occitan maestre borrowed from Old French maistre (master) derived from Latin magistrum, magister (master).
Origin
Latin
magistrum, magister
Gloss
master
Concept
Semantic Field
Social and political relations
Ontological Category
Person/Thing
Kanji
主
Emoji
Timeline
Distribution of cognates by language
Geogrpahic distribution of cognates
Cognates and derived terms
- magister Latin
- magistrum, magister Latin
- maestro Italian
- mastro Italian
- maeso Spanish, Castilian
- maestro Spanish, Castilian
- *méǵh₂s Proto-Indo-European
- amestrar Portuguese
- contramestre Portuguese
- mestrado Portuguese
- mestrar Portuguese
- mægester, mæġester Old English
- maister Middle English
- maistre Old French
- maistrie Old French
- mestre Old French
- mestre Catalan, Valencian
- मिस्त्री Hindi
- magistru Romanian, Moldavian, Moldovan
- maîte Norman
- maître Norman
- maistre Middle French
- meestre Old Portuguese
- মিস্ত্ৰী Assamese
- mêstar Old Saxon
- mēstar Old Saxon
- mēstar, mestar Old Saxon
- mèstre Occitan
- maestru Asturian
- mestri Friulian
- maestre Old Occitan
- мастеръ Old East Slavic
- mwaisse Walloon
- moître Bourguignon
- maestr Gallo
- moaite Picard