/ˈkanto̝/
OriginFrom Old Galician-Portuguese canto, from Latin cantus.
- masculine, uncountablesinging
- masculine, uncountablehymn, song
- masculinemiddle or small sized stone
“[Et] poserõ perlos muros beesteyros et arque[yro]s muytos et outros, pera deytar quantos et paos agudos metudos en ferros, en guisa que os que se quisesem chegar ao muro nõ podesem escapar de morte” — And they arranged many crossbowmen and bowmen on the walls, an others to throw stones and sharp sticks inserted in irons, so as the ones who wanted to come near the wall could not escape death
- masculinerim of a round object
- masculineextreme of a place or of a field
- masculinevery small field
- masculinecorner
- first-person, form-of, indicative, present, singularfirst-person singular present indicative of cantar
- interrogative, masculinehow much
“E sabedes canto tempo tardaron na elecsón?” — And do you know how long they took in the election?
Formscantos(plural) · canta(feminine, singular) · cantos(masculine, plural) · cantas(feminine, plural)