tima

See also: Appendix:Variations of "tima"

Esperanto

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /ˈtima/
  • Audio:(file)
  • Rhymes: -ima
  • Hyphenation: ti‧ma

Adjective

tima (accusative singular timan, plural timaj, accusative plural timajn)

  1. fearful

Jamamadí

Adjective

tima

  1. (Banawá) upriver

References

Middle English

Noun

tima

  1. (Early Middle English) alternative form of tyme (time)

Old English

Alternative forms

Etymology

From Proto-West Germanic *tīmō, from Proto-Germanic *tīmô. Cognate with Old High German *zīmo, Old Norse tími. Related to Old English tīd.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /ˈtiː.mɑ/

Noun

tīma m

  1. a time, hour (period of time)
    On hwelcne tīman sċealt þū tō morgne onwæcnan?
    What time do you have to wake up tomorrow?
    • c. 995, Ælfric, Extracts on Grammar in English
      Hit is tīma tō erienne.
      It's time to plough.
    • c. 897, Alfred the Great, translation of Pope Gregory's Pastoral Care
      Nū ūs is tīma þæt wē onwæcnen of slǣpe.
      Now it's time for us to wake up from our sleep.
    • c. 992, Ælfric, "The Nativity of the Innocents"
      Þā cleopode hē þā tungolwītegan on sundorsprǣċe and ġeornlīċe hīe befrugnon on hwelcne tīman hīe ǣrest þone steorran ġesāwen.
      He summoned the astrologers to private conversation and anxiously asked them at what time they first saw the star.
    • Homilies of the Anglo-Saxon Church
      Ġelēaffulle lǣwede menn, þe on rihtum sinsċipe lybbað, āġifað þrītigḟealdne wǣstm gōdra weorca, ġif hī heora æw̄e æfter bōclīcum ġesetnyssum healdað, þæt is, þæt hī for bearnes ġestrēone, on alyfedum tīman, hǣmed begān, and bearneacniġende wīf and mōnaðsēoc forbūgan; and ðonne hēo leng tȳman ne mæġ,̇ ġeswican hī hǣmedes.
      Faithful lay people, who live in righteous marriage, yield thirtyfold fruit of good works, if their marriage follows the biblical decrees; that is, that they have intercourse for the procreation of children at permitted times, and abstain from intercourse with pregnant or menstruating women, and that at the time they can no longer procreate, they cease intercourse.
  2. an age (of the world), era

Declension

Weak:

singular plural
nominative tīma tīman
accusative tīman tīman
genitive tīman tīmena
dative tīman tīmum

Synonyms

Derived terms

Descendants

  • Middle English: tyme, teme, teyme, tim, time, tym, tima, timæ, tyma (Early Middle English)
    • English: time (see there for further descendants)
    • Scots: time, teime, tim
    • Yola: deemes (plural)

Serbo-Croatian

Noun

tima (Cyrillic spelling тима)

  1. genitive singular of tim

Spanish

Verb

tima

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

Swedish

Verb

tima (present timar, preterite timade, supine timat, imperative tima)

  1. (archaic) to happen
    Synonym: ske

Conjugation

Conjugation of tima (weak)
active passive
infinitive tima timas
supine timat timats
imperative tima
imper. plural1 timen
present past present past
indicative timar timade timas timades
ind. plural1 tima timade timas timades
subjunctive2 time timade times timades
present participle timande
past participle timad

1 Archaic. 2 Dated. See the appendix on Swedish verbs.

References

Thao

Pronoun

tima

  1. (interrogative) who