Definition
Heat, fever, or agitation; in ancient Roman usage, the surge or movement of tides and heated waters.
Etymology
Latin 'aestus,' an Indo-European root word meaning 'heat' or 'boiling.' This is the foundational word from which many English aest- words derive.
Kelly Says
The Latin 'aestus' reveals how ancient Romans connected three concepts: summer heat, tidal surge, and internal agitation—they saw them all as expressions of restless, surging energy.
Translations
CSČeština
aestus
ay-stohs
DEDeutsch
Aestus
ay-stohs
ELΕλληνικά
αύξηση της παροχής
avksi-si tis parochis
ESEspañol
aestus
ay-stohs
FRFrançais
aestus
ay-stohs
GUGU
સમુદ્રની
sa-mu-dru-nee
HEעברית
פעילות של גאות
p'e'li-yot shel ga'ot
IDBahasa Indonesia
pasang surut
pasang surut
ITItaliano
aestus
ay-stohs
KMKM
ការផ្លាស់ប្តូរ
kaa-r ph-laas-b-troh
MSBahasa Melayu
aestus
ay-stohs
NLNederlands
aestus
ay-stohs
PTPortuguês
aestus
ay-stohs
RUРусский
аэстус
ay-es-toos
SVSvenska
aestus
ay-stohs
SWKiswahili
mtiririko wa maji
mtiri-ri-ko wa ma-ji
TAதமிழ்
கடலுக்கடியில்
kadalu-kkad-il
TEతెలుగు
సముద్రపు
samudrap-u
THไทย
คลื่นน้ำขึ้นน้ำลง
khluen nam khen nam long
TLTL
pag-aakyat ng tubig
pa-ga-a-kyat ng tubig
UKУкраїнська
аестус
ay-es-toos
VITiếng Việt
sóng thủy triều
song thuy trieu