/ˈtɛnda/, [ˈt̪ɛn̪.d̪ɐ], /ˈtenda/
OriginFrom Old Galician-Portuguese tenda (13th century, Cantigas de Santa Maria), from Early Medieval Latin or Late Latin tenda, from Vulgar Latin *tendita, substantivized feminine of *tenditus, as a variant form of tentus, perfect passive participle of Latin tendō.
- masculinetent
“Et nõ poderõ entrar a çibdade porlla fortolleza do lugar et dos nobres caballeyros que ende estauã, et çessarõ de conbater et poseron ende suas tendas en derredor.” — But they couldn't enter the city because of the strength of the place and of the noble knights who were there, and so they stopped fighting and put their tents around
- masculinestore, shop, workshop, stall
“que den a uos Eluira Perez en uossa vida de tres en tres annos çinquo varas de valacyna noua ou os dineiros para ella, quantos ella custar enna tenda” — they should give you, Elvira Pérez, throughout your life each three years, five yards of new Valencian cloth or the money for them, whatever it costs in the store
“quaesquer que tẽe tendas enna dita porta e portal dos Oulives que as non posan tẽer çarradas salvo dous dias santos a par e qualquer que a tever çarrada mais que dous dias enna semana continuus que pe” — anyone having shop at that gate and portal of the goldsmiths shall not close it except for two holidays in a row, and anyone who close it more than two consecutive days in a week shall lose any right
“que nehũu ourives non fose ousado de tẽer forja nen forjaron en sua casa et que todos lavrasen ennas ditas tendas e portales, segundo que senpre foron acostumados” — no goldsmith should dare to have a forge inside his house, and every one of them shall work at his shops and portals, as it always was their use
Formstendas(plural)