praya

English

Etymology

From Portuguese praya, obsolete form of praia (beach).

Noun

praya (plural prayas)

  1. 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

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)

  1. 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.
  2. 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

  1. ^ Avila, Marcel Twardowsky (2021), “praya”, in Proposta de dicionário nheengatu-português [Nheengatu–Portuguese dictionary proposal] (in Portuguese), São Paulo: USP, →DOI, page 627

Portuguese

Noun

praya f (plural prayas)

  1. obsolete spelling of praia