Via

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English

Pronunciation

  • IPA: /ˈviːə/, /ˈvaɪə/

Etymology 1

From Latin via (road), of uncertain origin, plausibly cognate with vehere 'to conduct'.

Noun

Via (plural Vias)
  1. A main road or highway, especially in ancient Rome. (Mainly used in set phrases, below.)
  2. (electronics) A small hole in a printed-circuit board filled with metal which connects two or more layers.

Derived terms

Related terms

Etymology 2

From Latin viā, ablative singular of via (way, road).

Alternative forms

Preposition

Via

  1. by way of; passing through
    They drove from New York to Los Angeles via Omaha.
    You can enter the building via the western gate.
  2. by (means of); using (a medium).
    I'll send you the information via e-mail.

Translations

Anagrams


Catalan

Etymology

From Latin viā.

Noun

Via f. (plural vies)

  1. lane
  2. way, path
  3. railway track
  4. channel

Synonyms

Derived terms

Preposition

Via

  1. via, by way of

Dutch

Etymology

From Latin viā, the ablative of via (road, way), of uncertain origin, plausibly cognate with vehere 'to conduct'. Entered Dutch in the Latin phrase 'per via de' (by way of), after the Portuguese por via de

Preposition

Via

  1. Via, through, by way of
  2. by (means of); using (a medium).

Synonyms

  • (trough (by way of)) langs
  • (by (means of)) per

Derived terms

  • via via ‎(using various intermediaries)‎

Esperanto

Etymology

From Esperanto second person pronoun vi + possessive ending -a

Determiner

Via (plural Viaj, accusative singular Vian, accusative plural Viajn)

  1. (possessive) your, yours

Fijian

Etymology

From Proto-Oceanic.

Noun

Via

  1. The tree species giant arum, Alocasia

Finnish

Adverb

Via

  1. via

Anagrams


French

Etymology

From Latin viā, the ablative of via (road, way), of uncertain origin, plausibly cognate with vehō (convey).

Preposition

Via

  1. Via, through, by way of.

Italian

Pronunciation

Noun

via f. (plural vie)

  1. road, street or path
  2. way or route
  3. means (means to an end)
  4. tract (in the body)
  5. start (of a race)

Synonyms

Derived terms

Related terms

Adverb

via

  1. away
  2. out

Preposition

via da

  1. away from

Interjection

via!

  1. come on!
  2. go away!

Anagrams


Latin

Etymology

From Proto-Indo-European *weǵʰ-yā-, which is a derivation of Proto-Indo-European *weǵʰ-.[1]

Pronunciation

Noun

via (genitive viae); f, first declension

  1. road, street or path
  2. way, method, manner
  3. the right way

Inflection

Number Singular Plural
nominative via viae
genitive viae viārum
dative viae viīs
accusative viam viās
ablative viā viīs
vocative via viae

Synonyms

Derived terms

Related terms

Descendants

References

  1. Edward A. Roberts, Bárbara Pastor, Diccionario etimológico indoeuropeo de la lengua española, Alianza Editorial 2009, ISBN 978-84-206-5252-8

Norwegian

Verb

Via

  1. past tense of vie
  2. Past participle of vie

Portuguese

Noun

Via f.

  1. A way (wide path)



Romanian

Etymology 1

French / Latin via

Preposition

Via

  1. via, by

Etymology 2

From Latin vīvere, present active infinitive of vīvō.

Verb

a Via 1st conj.

  1. (rare) To have life; to live, to exist
  2. (of intangibles, such as emotions and beliefs) to endure
Conjugation

Synonyms

Etymology 3

Form of the adjective viu

Adjective

via

  1. definite feminine singular nominative form of viu
  2. definite feminine singular accusative form of viu

Etymology 4

Form of the noun vie

Noun

via

  1. definite singular nominative form of vie. the vineyard
  2. definite singular accusative form of vie. the vineyard

Romansch

Noun

Via f. (plural Vias)

  1. road, street
  2. way

Synonyms


Swedish

Preposition

Via

  1. via, over, by, through

ca:via cs:via de:via et:via el:via eo:via fa:via fr:via gl:via ko:via io:via id:via it:via ka:via ku:via lo:via la:via lt:via li:via hu:via ml:via my:via nl:via ja:via no:via pl:via pt:via ru:via scn:via simple:via fi:via sv:via ta:via te:via tr:via uk:via vi:via zh:via