Se

Abbreviation

 * 1)  Sweden

Pronoun

 * 1) that, this
 * Petra eo se ? — What's that?

Pronoun

 * 1) himself, herself, itself (direct or indirect object)
 * 2) oneself (direct or indirect object)
 * 3) themselves (direct or indirect object)
 * 4) each other (direct or indirect object)

Pronoun

 * 1) myself
 * 2) yourself
 * 3) himself
 * 4) herself
 * 5) itself
 * 6) ourselves
 * 7) yourselves
 * 8) themselves
 * 9) oneself

Synonyms

 * sebe

Related terms

 * si

Preposition

 * 1) with

Etymology
From Old Danish se ( sjá:) <. See  (Swedish).

Verb

 * 1) see

Conjunction

 * 1) if

Noun

 * 1) law

Pronoun

 * 1)  it; (when the speaker does not point at the thing) that.
 * 2)  he, she.
 * 3)  the (see the usage notes below).

Inflection
Irregular.

Derived terms

 * se ja se
 * se siitä
 * sellainen
 * sen koommin
 * sen pituinen se

Pronoun

 * 1) (to) himself
 * 2) (to) herself
 * 3) (to) oneself
 * 4) (to) themself
 * 5) (to) themselves
 * 6) (to) each other
 * 1) (to) each other

Derived terms

 * s'en aller

Anagrams

 * es ès

Etymology
From se:, ablative and accusative pronoun form.

Pronoun

 * 1) himself, herself, itself (reflexive singular third-person personal pronoun)
 * 2) themselves (reflexive plural third-person personal pronoun)

Etymology
From c'est:

Verb

 * 1) to be
 * 2) that is (compare French c'est)
 * 3) it is (compare French c'est)

Conjunction

 * 1) neither

Derived terms

 * Expressions
 * se füle, se farka

Conjunction

 * 1) if
 * La klerko komencus laborar se ilu povus. &mdash; The clerk would begin to work if he could.
 * Se me povus, me komprus altra domo. &mdash; If I could, I would buy another house.

Pronoun

 * 1) Reflexive: oneself, himself, herself, itself, themselves.
 * Illa se videva in le speculo. — “She saw herself in the mirror.”
 * 1) Reciprocal: each other, one another.
 * Quando illes se cognosceva? — “When did they meet (each other)?”
 * 1) Used for passive constructions with undetermined agent (translated by "one").
 * De mi casa se vide le mar. — “From my house the sea is seen.” (Literally, “...the sea sees itself.”)
 * 1) Hence, used for expressions of the type "to get/become ...-ed".
 * espaventar — “to frighten”; espaventar se = "to get frightened" (lit., "to frighten oneself")

Etymology 1
From se <  si:.

Conjunction

 * 1) if
 * Se non è vero, è ben trovato.
 * If it is not true, it is a good story.
 * 1) whether
 * 2) if only

Derived terms

 * se non
 * se non che

Pronoun

 * 1) Variant of sé

Noun

 * 1) せ: hiragana letter se
 * 2) セ: katakana letter se

Noun

 * 1) dog

Pronoun

 * 1)  he, she, it

Synonyms

 * hän

Etymology
From.

Pronoun

 * 1) the  of the reflexive pronoun meaning himself, herself, itself, themselves
 * Sē amat.
 * He loves himself.
 * Necessario sē aperiunt.
 * They were forced to open themselves.
 * In mare se praecipitavit.
 * He drowned himself in the sea.
 * 1) the  of the reflexive pronoun meaning by himself, by herself, by itself, by themselves

Derived terms

 * inter sē
 * per sē
 * sēcum

Descendants

 * French:
 * Italian:
 * Portuguese:
 * Romanian: ,
 * Spanish:

Cmavo

 * 1) exchanges the x1 and x2 sumti of the following brivla
 * mi se viska la djan. — “I am seen by John.”
 * 1) indicates that the object of a preposition fills x2 of its corresponding brivla
 * ti cukta se bau la oDET. — “This is a book in Odette's language.”
 * 1) reverses the two clauses connected by a logical conjunction
 * mi klama le zarci se.u le ckule — “I go to the school whether or not the store.”

Pinyin syllable
se



Etymology
From Old Danish se ( sjá:) <. See  (Swedish).

Verb

 * 1) To see.

Etymology
Representing the, *undefined:, adapted in as a definite article by analogy with the t- stem forms (Old English þæt:). Cognate with Old Saxon sē:, Old Norse sá:, Gothic 𐍃𐌰:, Greek ὁ:. See also feminine forms under seo:.

Article

 * 1) the
 * Se mona.
 * The moon.

Adjective

 * 1) that, those
 * Þone ræd gerædde Widsið.
 * Widsith gave that advice.

Pronoun

 * 1) he, it, that
 * Þa ne sacað.
 * They do not quarrel.”

Pronoun

 * 1) oneself

Descendants

 * French:

Etymology 2
si:

Conjunction

 * 1) if

Descendants

 * French:

Pronoun
se


 * 1) she
 * 2) they

Pronoun

 * 1) Reflexive and reciprocal: oneself, himself, herself, itself, themselves, yourself; each other, one another.
 * Ela se viu no espelho. — “She saw herself in the mirror.”
 * E você se diz um professor! — “And you call yourself a teacher!”
 * Quando eles se conheceram? — “When did they meet (each other)?”
 * 1) Used for passive constructions with transitive verbs and undetermined agent (usually translated with one).
 * Da minha casa se vê o mar. — “From my house the sea is seen.” (Literally, “...the sea sees itself.”)
 * 1) Hence, used for expressions of the type "to get/become ...-ed".
 * espantar = "to frighten"; espantar-se = "to get frightened" (lit. "to frighten oneself")
 * 1) It also developed to a form of undetermined subject for intransitive verbs (usually translated with "one").
 * Vive-se bem em Belém. — “One lives well in Belém.” (Literally, *“∅ lives oneself well in Belém.”)

Conjunction

 * 1) if
 * 2) *2007, J. K. Rowling, Lya Wyler, Harry Potter e as Relíquias da Morte, Rocco, page 317:
 * Desculpe, acho que dá mais medo se for meia-noite!
 * I'm sorry, I thought it would be more fearsome if it were midnight!

Etymology
From se:.

Pronoun

 * 1)  oneself, himself, herself, itself, themselves

Pronoun

 * 1) oneself  (clitic form of reflexive pronoun)
 * 2) myself
 * 3) yourself
 * 4) himself
 * 5) herself
 * 6) itself
 * 7) ourselves
 * 8) yourselves
 * 9) themselves

Pronoun

 * 1) myself
 * 2) yourself
 * 3) himself
 * 4) herself
 * 5) itself
 * 6) ourselves
 * 7) yourselves
 * 8) themselves
 * 9) oneself

Pronoun

 * 1) Third person (also used for usted: and ustedes:) reflexive direct or indirect object; oneself, himself, herself, itself, yourself; each other; one another
 * 2) Used to form the passive voice in the third person (also used for usted: and ustedes:).
 * ¿Cómo se llama? — “What is your name?” (Literally, “How are you called?”)
 * 1) Used to form impersonal sentences.
 * Se dice que... — “It is said that...”
 * 1) Used instead of indirect object pronouns le: and les: before the direct object pronouns lo:, la:, los:, or las:.
 * El samaritano se las dio. — “The Samaritan gave them to him.”

Etymology
From se:, sea:, sia:, from  séa:, sjá:, from. Cognate with Danish se:, Norwegian Nynorsk sjå: and Icelandic sjá:, English see:, German sehen: and Dutch zien:.

Verb

 * 1) to see; use one's sight
 * 2) * 1888, August Strindberg, Fröken Julie
 * Tvärtom, fröken Julie, som ni ser har jag skyndat uppsöka min övergivna!
 * Quite the opposite, miss Julie, as you can see I have rushed to find my abandonned one!
 * 1) * 1915, John Wahlborg, Stjärnbanér i blågult
 * Vad jag sett och hört och känt har helt enkelt överväldigat mig.
 * What I have seen and heard and felt has quite simply overwhelmed me.
 * 1) to see; to understand
 * Jag ser inte hur det skulle kunna vara möjligt.
 * I don't see how that could be possible.
 * 1) to see; to form a mental picture of

Hypernyms

 * förnimma

Related terms

 * höra
 * lukta
 * smaka
 * känna

Derived terms

 * avse
 * bortse
 * inse
 * se efter
 * se på
 * tillse

Synonyms

 * use one's sight
 * titta
 * kolla
 * stirra
 * understand
 * förstå
 * fatta
 * begripa

Etymology
From. Cognate with Tocharian B soy:, Old Armenian ուստր: and Ancient Greek υἱύς:.

Noun

 * 1) son

Article

 * 1) a, an

Preposition

 * 1) out of

Pronoun

 * 1) she
 * 2) they

Synonyms

 * hja
 * sy

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