cacah

Indonesian

Etymology

From Malay cacah, probably from Proto-Mon-Khmer *cɔh, *ʔcɔh (to peck, to strike with adze, hoe, etc.).

  • The senses other than image on skin of chopped mark is semantic loan from Javanese ꦕꦕꦃ (cacah, counting, chopping), from Old Javanese cacah (in pieces, in shreds, cut up, covered with wounds, carving).

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): [ˈt͡ʃat͡ʃah]
  • Hyphenation: ca‧cah

Noun

cacah (first-person possessive cacahku, second-person possessive cacahmu, third-person possessive cacahnya)

  1. image (on skin) of chopped mark.
  2. (dialect, Java) count: the result of a tally that reveals the number of items in a set; a quantity counted.
  3. (dialect, Java) farmer, regular villager.

Derived terms

  • bercacah
  • cacahan
  • mencacah
  • mencacah-cacah
  • pencacah
  • pencacahan
  • tercacah
  • cacah baku
  • cacah ekonomi
  • cacah jiwa
  • cacah karya
  • cacah lubang
  • cacah sawah

Verb

cacah

  1. to chop.
    Synonyms: cencang, cincang

Derived terms

  • mencacah

Further reading

This article is issued from Wiktionary. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.