/ˈsenɑt/, [ˈsenɑtˑ]
OriginFrom Latin senātus, from senex (“old”).
- senate (the upper house of a bicameral parliament in several countries)
- senate (a collegial decision-making body in some universities)
- historicalSenate (in ancient Rome, a council of family elders or a higher council of state)
- historicalSenate (in Russia, initially the legislative and governing body of the state, later the supervisory body of the judiciary.)
Formssenati(genitive) · senatit(partitive) · senat(nominative, singular) · senatid(nominative, plural) · senat(accusative, nominative, singular) · senatid(accusative, nominative, plural) · senati(accusative, genitive, singular) · senatid(accusative, genitive, plural) · senati(genitive, singular) · senatite(genitive, plural) · senatit(partitive, singular) · senateid(partitive, plural) · senatisse(illative, singular) · senatitesse(illative, plural) · senateisse(illative, plural) · senatis(inessive, singular) · senatites(inessive, plural) · senateis(inessive, plural) · senatist(elative, singular) · senatitest(elative, plural)
Source: Wiktionary — CC BY-SA 4.0