- fricatus
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fricātus, (ūs) m. [ frico ]трение, натирание PM
Латинско-русский словарь. 2003.
Латинско-русский словарь. 2003.
fricative — noun Etymology: Latin fricatus, past participle of fricare Date: 1863 a consonant characterized by frictional passage of the expired breath through a narrowing at some point in the vocal tract • fricative adjective … New Collegiate Dictionary
fricative — 1860 (adj.), 1863 (n.), from Mod.L. fricativus, from L. fricatus, pp. of fricare to rub … Etymology dictionary
fricative — [frik′ə tiv] adj. [< L fricatus, pp. of fricare (see FRIABLE) + IVE] Phonet. articulated by means of breath forced through a narrow slit formed at some point in the mouth, producing friction, as in (f, v, th, z, h) n. a fricative consonant … English World dictionary
frication — friˈkāshən noun ( s) Etymology: Middle English fricacioun, from Latin frication , fricatio, from fricatus (past participle of fricare to rub) + ion , io ion more at friction 1. obsolete : friction; … Useful english dictionary
fric|a|tive — «FRIHK uh tihv», adjective, noun. Phonetics. –adj. pronounced by forcing the breath through a narrow opening formed especially by placing the tongue or lips near or against the palate or teeth; spirant. F, v, s, and z are fricative consonants. –n … Useful english dictionary