OriginBack-formation from rézsül (“obliquely, diagonally”). First attested in 1897.
- a steep, artificial inclined surface; (loosely) a bank or slope of earth
“Desperate for the waiters to leave, he and Florence turned in their chairs to consider the view of a broad mossy lawn, and beyond, a tangle of flowering shrubs and trees clinging to a steep bank that ”
- the slope or ramp of an earthwork (e.g., an embankment or cut)
- in a terraced field, a slope separating adjacent terraces
Formsrézsűk(plural) · rézsű(nominative, singular) · rézsűk(nominative, plural) · rézsűt(accusative, singular) · rézsűket(accusative, plural) · rézsűnek(dative, singular) · rézsűknek(dative, plural) · rézsűvel(instrumental, singular) · rézsűkkel(instrumental, plural) · rézsűért(causal-final, singular) · rézsűkért(causal-final, plural) · rézsűvé(singular, translative) · rézsűkké(plural, translative) · rézsűig(singular, terminative) · rézsűkig(plural, terminative) · rézsűként(essive-formal, singular) · rézsűkként(essive-formal, plural) · -(essive-modal, singular) · -(essive-modal, plural) · rézsűben(inessive, singular)