Paris quadrifolia
From Latin herba Paris (Herba Paris), Paris herba, from Latin herba and Latin par (“equal”), in reference to the regularity of its leaves, petals, etc. See image.
Paris
- A taxonomic genus within the family Melanthiaceae – herb Paris and its close relatives, native to Asia and Europe.
From Middle English Parys, Paris, from Old French Paris, from the Late Latin name of an earlier settlement, Lutetia Parisiorum (“Lutetia of the Parisii”), from Latin Parīsiī, a Gaulish tribe, from Transalpine Gaulish *parios (“cauldron”), from Proto-Celtic *kʷaryos, from Proto-Indo-European *kʷer-. Doublet of Parizh.
Paris
- The capital and largest city of France.
1996, Eldon Black, “Prologue: 1960-1967”, in Direct Intervention: Canada-France Relations, 1967-1974[1], Carleton University Press, →ISBN, →OCLC, page 9:And of course, in July 1967 De Gaulle did come to Canada. He made his speeches in Quebec, was enthusiastically received on the Chemin du Roy, shouted “Vive le Quebec libre” in Montreal and, on learning of the reaction of the Canadian government, returned to Paris without going to Ottawa.
- A department of Île-de-France, France.
- (metonymically) The government of France.
- A locale named after the French city.
- A hamlet in Jutland, Denmark.
- A hamlet in El Wadi El Gedid governorate, Egypt.
- A former settlement in Yukon, Canada.
- A former settlement in Kiritimati, Kiribati.
- A locale in the United States.
- A city in Arkansas, United States and one of the two county seats of Logan County.
- A city, the county seat of Bear Lake County, Idaho.
- A city, the county seat of Edgar County, Illinois.
- An unincorporated community in Jefferson County and Jennings County, Indiana.
- An unincorporated community in Linn County, Iowa.
- A city, the county seat of Bourbon County, Kentucky.
- A town, the county seat of Oxford County, Maine.
- An unincorporated community in Green Charter Township, Mecosta County, Michigan.
- A census-designated place in Lafayette County, Mississippi.
- A city, the county seat of Monroe County, Missouri; named for the city in Kentucky.
- An unincorporated community in the towns of Dummer and Stark, Coos County, New Hampshire.
- A town in Oneida County, New York; named for early benefactor Col. Isaac Paris.
- A township and unincorporated community therein, in Stark County, Ohio.
- An unincorporated community in Lane County, Oregon; named for postmaster G. E. Parris.
- A census-designated place in Hanover Township, Washington County, Pennsylvania.
- A city, the county seat of Lamar County, Texas.
- A city, the county seat of Henry County, Tennessee.
- An unincorporated community in Fauquier County, Virginia.
- A town in Grant County, Wisconsin.
- A town and unincorporated community therein, in Kenosha County, Wisconsin; named for the town in New York.
- A number of townships in the United States, listed under Paris Township.
- A community of Ontario; named for nearby gypsum deposits, used to make plaster of Paris (itself named for the city).
- An English habitational surname from Old French for someone from Paris.
- A male given name from place name.
- A female given name transferred from the place name, of modern usage, usually from the French city.
capital of France
- Afrikaans: Parys (af)
- Akan: Paris
- Albanian: Paris m
- Amharic: ፓሪስ (paris), ፓሪ (pari) (French form)
- Antillean Creole: Pawi m
- Arabic: بَارِيس f (bārīs), (archaic) بَارِيز f (bārīz)
- Gulf Arabic: باريس f (bārīs), پاريس f (pārīs)
- Hijazi Arabic: باريس f (bārīs, pārīs)
- Aragonese: París m
- Armenian: Փարիզ (Pʻariz)
- Asturian: París
- Azerbaijani: Paris (az)
- Bashkir: Париж (Parij)
- Basque: Paris (eu)
- Belarusian: Пары́ж m (Parýž)
- Bengali: প্যারিস (bn) (pêriś)
- Breton: Pariz (br)
- Bulgarian: Пари́ж (bg) m (Paríž)
- Burmese: ပါရီ (pari)
- Catalan: París (ca) m
- Chechen: Париж (Pariž)
- Chinese:
- Cantonese: 巴黎 (baa1 lai4)
- Eastern Min: 巴黎 (Bă-là̤)
- Hakka: 巴黎 (Pâ-lì)
- Hokkien: 巴黎 (zh-min-nan) (Pa-lê)
- Mandarin: 巴黎 (zh) (Bālí)
- Wu: 巴黎
- Chuvash: Парис (Paris)
- Cornish: Paris
- Corsican: Parighji f, Parigi f, Pariggi f
- Crimean Tatar: Paris
- Czech: Paříž (cs) f
- Danish: Paris (da) n
- Dutch: Parijs (nl) n
- Esperanto: Parizo (eo)
- Estonian: Pariis (et)
- Farefare: Pari
- Faroese: París m
- Finnish: Pariisi (fi)
- French: Paris (fr) m
- Galician: París (gl) m
- Georgian: პარიზი (ka) (ṗarizi)
- German: Paris (de) n
- Greek: Παρίσι (el) n (Parísi)
- Ancient: Λευκετία f (Leuketía), Λουκοτοκία f (Loukotokía), Λουκετία (Louketía), Λευκοτοκία (Leukotokía)
- Gujarati: પૅરિસ (pěris)
- Hausa: Paris f
- Hawaiian: Palika
- Hebrew: פָּרִיז (pariz)
- Hindi: पेरिस (peris)
- Hungarian: Párizs (hu)
- Icelandic: París (is) f
- Irish: Páras m
- Italian: Parigi (it) f
- Japanese: パリ (ja) (Pari) (巴里 (ja) (Pari) dated)
- Kalmyk: Париж (Parizh)
- Kannada: ಪ್ಯಾರಿಸ್ (kn) (pyāris)
- Kashubian: Pariz
- Kazakh: Париж (Parij)
- Khmer: ប៉ារីស (km) (paariih)
- Korean: 파리 (ko) (Pari), 빠리 (ko) (Ppari) (North Korea)
- Kurdish:
- Northern Kurdish: Parîs (ku)
- Kyrgyz: Париж (Parij)
- Lao: ປາລີ (pā lī)
- Latin: Parīsius m (New Latin), Lutetia Parisiorum f, Lutetia (la) f (Contemporary Latin)
- Latvian: Parīze f
- Lithuanian: Paryžius (lt) m
- Luxembourgish: Paräis (lb)
- Macedonian: Париз (mk) m (Pariz)
- Malay: Paris
- Malayalam: പാരിസ് (pārisŭ)
- Maltese: Pariġi
- Manx: Paarys m
- Maori: Parī
- Marathi: पॅरिस (pĕris)
- Middle English: Parys
- Mongolian: Парис (Paris)
- Nepali: पेरिस (peris)
- Northern Sotho: Paris
- Norwegian:
- Bokmål: Paris (no)
- Nynorsk: Paris
- Occitan: París (oc)
- Old Church Slavonic: Парижь (Parižĭ)
- Ossetian: Париж (Pariž)
- Pashto: پاريس (ps) m (pārís)
- Persian: پاریس (fa) (pâris)
- Polish: Paryż (pl) m
- Portuguese: Paris (pt) f
- Punjabi:
- Gurmukhi: ਪੈਰਿਸ m (pairis)
- Shahmukhi: پَیرَس m (pairas)
- Romani: o Parìzo m
- Romanian: Paris (ro)
- Russian: Пари́ж (ru) m (Paríž)
- Samoan: Paris
- Samogitian: Parīžios
- Scottish Gaelic: Paris
- Serbo-Croatian:
- Cyrillic: Париз m
- Roman: Pariz (sh) m
- Sicilian: Parisi f
- Sinhalese: පැරිස් (pæris), පැරිසිය (pærisiya)
- Slovak: Paríž (sk) m
- Slovene: Paríz (sl) m
- Somali: Baariis
- Sorbian:
- Lower Sorbian: Paris
- Upper Sorbian: Paris
- Spanish: París (es) m
- Swahili: Paris
- Swedish: Paris (sv) n
- Tagalog: Paris
- Tajik: Париж (Pariž), Порис (Poris)
- Tamil: பாரிஸ் (ta) (pāris)
- Tatar: Париж (tt) (Parij)
- Telugu: పారిస్ (pāris)
- Thai: ปารีส (th) (bpaa-rîis)
- Tibetan: པ་ལི (pa li)
- Turkish: Paris (tr)
- Turkmen: Pariž
- Udmurt: Париж (Pariž)
- Ukrainian: Пари́ж (uk) m (Parýž)
- Urdu: پیرس m (pairis)
- Uyghur: پارىژ (parizh)
- Uzbek: Parij
- Vietnamese: Pa-ri, Ba Lê (vi) (dated), Ba Lý
- Walloon: Paris (wa)
- Welsh: Paris (cy)
- West Flemish: Parys n
- West Frisian: Parys (fy) n
- Yakut: Париж (Parizh)
- Yiddish: פּאַריז n (pariz)
- Yoruba: Paris
- Zazaki: (Southern Zazaki) Paris
- Zhuang: Bahliz
|
Borrowed from Ancient Greek Πάρις (Páris).
Paris
- (Greek mythology) A Trojan prince who eloped with Helen.
- A male given name from Ancient Greek, from the Trojan hero.
Paris
- A French surname originating as a patronymic, ultimately from Latin Patricius.
- Parise, Pariset, Parez, Paresse, Parisot, Pariseau, Parizeau, Parris, de Paris, Parizot, Parizet
Paris
- An English surname of Celtic origin, a variant of Parris.
Paris
- A Belgian surname, a variant of Parys.
Paris
- A Sicilian surname, a variant of Parigi.
Paris
- A Spanish surname, a variant of Aparicio.
Paris
- Paris (the capital and largest city of France)
Paris
- Paris (the capital city of France)
From Old French Paris, from Latin Lutetia Parīsiōrum.
Paris
- Paris (the capital and largest city of France)
From Ancient Greek Πάρις (Páris).
Paris
- (mythology) Paris (prince of Troy, abductor of Helen)
Paris on French Wikipedia
Inherited from Old French Paris, from Late Latin name of an earlier settlement, Lūtētia Parīsiōrum (“Lutetia of the Parisii”), from Latin Parīsiī, a Gaulish tribe.
Paris m or f (mostly m)
- Paris (the capital and largest city of France)
- Synonym: (slang) Paname
Paris est beaucoup moins bruyant en été- Paris is much less noisy in summer
Paris est vraiment belle la nuit- Paris is really beautiful at night
- Paris (a department of Île-de-France, France)
Partially from Occitan París and most generally from a variant of the given name Patrice; ultimately from Latin Patricius.[1]
Paris m or f
- a common surname
From Middle High German Pārīs, from Old French Paris. The modern form follows non-diphthongising dialects, obviously reinforced by Modern French. The form Pareis still survives dialectally; compare also Luxembourgish Paräis, Dutch Parijs.
- IPA(key): /paˈʁiːs/, (dated also) /paˈʁɪs/
- Rhymes: -iːs
Paris n (proper noun, genitive Paris' or (rare) Parisens or (with an article) Paris)
- Paris (the capital and largest city of France)
From Latin Paris, from Ancient Greek Πάρις (Páris).
Paris m (proper noun, strong, genitive Paris' or (learned) Paridis or (with an article) Paris)
- (Greek mythology) Paris
- “Paris” in Digitales Wörterbuch der deutschen Sprache
- “Paris” in Duden online
- “Paris” in Duden online
From English Paris.
- IPA(key): /páː.rìs/
- (Standard Kano Hausa) IPA(key): [páː.rɪ̀s]
Pār̃ìs f
- Paris (a city in France)
Borrowed from Ancient Greek Πάρις (Páris).
Paris m
- (Greek mythology) A Trojan prince who eloped with Helen.
- a male given name from Ancient Greek, from the Trojan hero
Third-declension noun (non-Greek-type or Greek-type, normal variant), singular only.
1In poetry.
Paris
- Alternative form of Parys
Paris
- Paris (the capital and largest city of France)
Paris
- Paris (the capital and largest city of France)
Paris
- Paris (the capital and largest city of modern France)
Inherited from Old Galician-Portuguese Paris.
- Rhymes: (Brazil) -is, (Portugal, Rio de Janeiro) -iʃ
- Hyphenation: Pa‧ris
Paris
- Paris (the capital and largest city of France)
Paris is never indicated by an article; see usage notes for Portugal.
For quotations using this term, see Citations:Paris.
Paris f
- Paris (the capital and largest city of France)
Borrowed from Ancient Greek Πάρις (Páris).
Paris m anim (genitive singular Parida, declension pattern of chlap)
- (Greek mythology) Paris
- a male given name from Ancient Greek, from the Trojan hero
Borrowed from Ancient Greek Πάρις (Páris).
- IPA(key): /ˈpaɾis/ [ˈpa.ɾis]
- Rhymes: -aɾis
- Syllabification: Pa‧ris
Paris m
- (Greek mythology) Paris, the Trojan prince
From Old French Paris.
Paris n (genitive Paris)
- Paris (the capital and largest city of France)
From Ancient Greek Πᾰ́ρῐς (Páris).
Paris c (genitive Paris)
- (Greek mythology) Paris (Trojan prince)
Paris
- Paris (the capital and largest city of France)
From Ottoman Turkish پارس (paris), from French Paris.
- IPA(key): /paːɾis/
- Hyphenation: Pa‧ris
Paris
- Paris (the capital and largest city of France)
Paris
- Paris (the capital city of France)
Paris f
- Paris (the capital city of France)