hiatus
1hiatus — [ jatys; jatys ] n. m. • 1521; mot lat. « ouverture », puis « hiatus » 1 ♦ Ling. Rencontre de deux voyelles, de deux éléments vocaliques, soit à l intérieur d un mot (ex. aérer, géant), soit entre deux mots énoncés sans pause (ex. tu as eu). L… …
2Hiatus — (lat. hiatus „Öffnung“, „Spalt“, „Kluft“) steht für: im allgemeinen Sprachgebrauch: eine Lücke oder Unterbrechung medizinisch für das Fehlen von mittleren Reifungsstadien der weißen Blutkörperchen, siehe Hiatus leucaemicus in der Anatomie:… …
3Hiatus — may refer to: Recess (break) Hiatus, a small difference in pitch between two musical tones (see Interval (music)) Hiatus (linguistics), a phonological term referring to the lack of a consonant separating two vowels in separate syllables, as in co …
4hiatus — I noun abeyance, adjournment, break, cessation, chasm, delay, disconnection, discontinuity, disjunction, disunion, fracture, gap, gulf, halt, hiatus, incompleteness, interference, interim, interlude, intermission, interregnum, interruption,… …
5Hiatus — Hi*a tus, n.; pl. L. {Hiatus}, E. {Hiatuses}. [L., fr. hiare, hiatum, to gape; akin to E. yawn. See {Yawn}.] 1. An opening; an aperture; a gap; a chasm; esp., a defect in a manuscript, where some part is lost or effaced; a space where something… …
6Hiatus — Hi*a tus, n.; pl. L. {Hiatus}, E. {Hiatuses}. [L., fr. hiare, hiatum, to gape; akin to E. yawn. See {Yawn}.] 1. An opening; an aperture; a gap; a chasm; esp., a defect in a manuscript, where some part is lost or effaced; a space where something… …
7Hiātus — (lat.), 1) Öffnung, besonders des Mundes; 2) (gr. Chasmodia), in der Metrik das Zusammentreffen eines kurzen Vocals am Ende des einen u. eines Vocals am Anfang des anderen Wortes. Die Griechen vermieden den H. entweder durch den Apostroph: τὸν δ… …
8hiatus — HIÁTUS, hiatusuri, s.n. v. hiat. Trimis de gall, 20.09.2007. Sursa: DEX 98 HIÁTUS s.n. v. hiat. Trimis de LauraGellner, 13.09.2007. Sursa: DN …
9hiatus — 1560s, break or opening in a material object, from L. hiatus opening, aperture, rupture, gap, from pp. stem of hiare to gape, stand open (see YAWN (Cf. yawn)). Sense of gap or interruption in events, etc. is first recorded 1610s …
10hiatus — [hī āt′əs] n. pl. hiatuses or hiatus [L, pp. of hiare, to gape < IE base * ĝhē , ĝhēi > GAP, GASP] 1. a break where a part is missing or lost, as in a manuscript; gap in a sequence; lacuna 2. any gap or interruption, as in continuity or… …