[ˈstri.a], [ˈstriː.a]
OriginFrom Proto-Italic *strig-jā, from what looks like a cross of Proto-Indo-European *streyg- (“to brush, strip, shear”) and Proto-Indo-European *strengʰ- (“to draw, tie”). Cognate to Latin striga, Latin stringō, English streak, German Striemen (“streak, stripe”), Old High German strimo, Dutch striem.
- declension-1, feminineThe flute of a column.
- declension-1, feminineA fold of drapery, pleat.
Formsstriae(genitive) · stria(nominative, singular) · striae(nominative, plural) · striae(genitive, singular) · striārum(genitive, plural) · striae(dative, singular) · striīs(dative, plural) · striam(accusative, singular) · striās(accusative, plural) · striā(ablative, singular) · striīs(ablative, plural) · stria(singular, vocative) · striae(plural, vocative)
Source: Wiktionary — CC BY-SA 4.0