passado

passado
noun (plural -dos or -does) Etymology: modification of Middle French passade (from Old Italian passata) or Old Italian passata, from passare to pass, from Vulgar Latin Date: 1588 archaic a thrust in fencing with one foot advanced

New Collegiate Dictionary. 2001.

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  • passado — adj. 1. Que passou ou decorreu. 2. Seco. 3. Transpassado. 4. Surpreendido, atordoado. • s. m. 5. O tempo decorrido, o pretérito. • passados s. m. pl. 6. Antepassados …   Dicionário da Língua Portuguesa

  • passado — [pə sä′dō] n. pl. passados or passadoes [altered < Fr passade < It passata: see PASSADE] Fencing a thrust or lunge with one foot advanced …   English World dictionary

  • Passado — Passade Pas*sade , Passado Pas*sa do, n. [F. passade; cf. Sp. pasada. See {Pass}, v. i.] 1. (Fencing) A pass or thrust. Shak. [1913 Webster] 2. (Man.) A turn or course of a horse backward or forward on the same spot of ground. [1913 Webster] …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

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  • passado — /peuh sah doh/, n., pl. passados, passadoes. Fencing. a forward thrust with the weapon while advancing with one foot. [1580 90; alter. of Sp pasada or It passata. See PASSADE] * * * …   Universalium

  • passado — pas·sa·do …   English syllables

  • passado — pas•sa•do [[t]pəˈsɑ doʊ[/t]] n. pl. dos, does spo (in fencing) a forward thrust with the weapon while advancing with one foot • Etymology: 1580–90; alter. of Sp pasada or It passata. See pass, ade …   From formal English to slang

  • passado — /pəˈsadoʊ/ (say puh sahdoh) noun (plural passados or passadoes) Fencing a forward thrust with the sword, one foot being advanced at the same time. {Spanish pasada, from Italian passata, from passare pass (verb) …  

  • passado —   n. forward thrust in fencing …   Dictionary of difficult words

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