buey
Ladino
Etymology
From Vulgar Latin *boem, from Latin bovem, accusative singular of bōs.
Old Spanish
Etymology
From Latin bovem. Cognate with Old Galician-Portuguese boi and Old French buef.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /ˈbwe.i/, /ˈbwei̯/
Noun
buey m (plural bueyes)
- ox
- c. 1200, Almerich, Fazienda de Ultramar, f. 18v:
- Nó cobdicies coſa de to uezino. Ni cobdicies mugier de to proximo. Nẏ ſu máceba. ny ſo bueẏ. ni ſo aſno. Ni su mula. Ni nulla coſa de to vezino.
- Do not covet your neighbor's goods. Nor covet your neighbor's wife, nor his female servant, nor his ox, nor his donkey, nor his mule, nor any other thing that belongs to your neighbor.
- Idem, f. 36r.
- Job fue much rich õe e ouo .v. fijos. ⁊ .iij. fijas. ⁊ ouo .mil. ouejas. ⁊ .iij. mil. camellos. ⁊ .d. iugos de bueẏes. ⁊ .v. mil aſnas.
- Job was a very rich man. And he had five sons and three daughters. And he owned a thousand sheep and three thousand camels and five hundred yoke of oxen and five thousand donkeys.
Spanish
Alternative forms
- bue
- búe
Etymology
Inherited from Old Spanish buey, from Vulgar Latin *boem for Latin bovem (compare Italian bue), accusative singular of bōs.
The variants güey and wey represent a neutralization of the clusters /bw/ and /gw/. Doublet of bife.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /ˈbwei/ [ˈbwei̯]
- (Castilian)
Audio: (file) - Rhymes: -ei
- Syllabification: buey
Noun
buey m (plural bueyes)
Derived terms
- a paso de buey
- buey almizclero
- buey de cabestrillo
- buey de carga
- buey de caza
- buey de mar
- buey de marzo
- buey del Pacífico
- buey viejo surco derecho
- hablar de bueyes perdidos
- lengua de buey
- nervio de buey
- ojo de buey
- pata de buey
- poner el carro delante de los bueyes
Further reading
- “buey”, in Diccionario de la lengua española, Vigésima tercera edición, Real Academia Española, 2014
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