/ˈtǎːkɐs/
OriginFrom Proto-Balto-Slavic *takas, from Proto-Indo-European *tekʷ-. Cognate with Polish tok (“process”) and Avestan 𐬙𐬀𐬐𐬀 (taka, “course”). See also tekė́ti.
- footpath, path
- track, lane
- figurativelyway
“gyvenimo takas” — way to live
- narrow carpet
- gullet (interval between teeth of a saw blade)
- channel, tube (for air or liquid)
- neologismtaco
“Gaminam šiandien takus?” — Are we making tacos today?
Formstãkas(canonical, masculine, stress-pattern-4) · takai̇̃(plural) · tãkas(nominative, singular) · takai̇̃(nominative, plural) · tãko(genitive, singular) · takų̃(genitive, plural) · tãkui(dative, singular) · takáms(dative, plural) · tãką(accusative, singular) · takùs(accusative, plural) · takù(instrumental, singular) · takai̇̃s(instrumental, plural) · takè(locative, singular) · takuosè(locative, plural) · tãke(singular, vocative) · takai̇̃(plural, vocative) · tãkas(canonical, masculine, stress-pattern-2) · tãkai(plural) · tãkai(nominative, plural) · tãkų(genitive, plural)
Source: Wiktionary — CC BY-SA 4.0