praya
English
Etymology
From Portuguese praya, obsolete form of praia (“beach”).
Noun
praya (plural prayas)
- A promenade or drive located beside the seashore in Hong Kong.
- 1973, Tzu-nang Chiu, The Port of Hong Kong: A Survey of its Development, page 24:
- Elsewhere on the Island, facilities for the transport of goods were limited to landing piers and prayas for junks and lighters.
References
- Henry Yule; A[rthur] C[oke] Burnell (1903), “praya”, in William Crooke, editor, Hobson-Jobson […] , London: John Murray, […].
Nheengatu
Etymology
Borrowed from Portuguese praia (“beach”). Displaced iwikuí, from Old Tupi.[1]
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /ˈpraja/, [ˈpɾa.jɐ]
- Rhymes: -aja
- Hyphenation: pra‧ya
Noun
praya (plural praya-itá)
- beach
- Synonyms: iwikuí, iwikuitiwa
- 2021, Bíblia Baré, Buia Igarapé; Alto Rio Negro Indigenous Territory: Missão Novas Tribos do Brasil, translation of The New Testament, Luka 5:11:
- Asui aintaumuyari aintaigara praya rese, aintauxari panye maa asui aintausu sakakuera.
- Then they docked their boats on the beach, left everything there and continued.
- sand
- Synonym: iwikuí
- 2014, “NÃNÔ, in Maria Sílvia Cintra Martins, editor, Leetra Indígena[1], volume 3, number 3, São Carlos: UFSCar, →ISSN, archived from the original on 22 June 2024, page 29; text written in São Gabriel da Cachoeira:
- AIKUÉ SIYA NÃNÃ NŨGARAITA. PURÃGA USEMU MAMÉ IWÍ YUMUNANIWA PRAYA IRŨMU.
- There are many kinds of pineapple. They grow well where soil is mixed with sand.
References
Portuguese
Noun
praya f (plural prayas)
- obsolete spelling of praia