出典:Wiktionary
出典:『Wiktionary』 (2026/02/25 21:19 UTC 版)
From Ecclesiastical Latin missa (“mass”).
missa
In use by the 6th century. Presumably from the phrase īte missa est (“go, the dismissal is made”) (said by a priest to dismiss the congregation after the service), where missa is Late Latin and Vulgar Latin, for missiō (“dismissal”), from mittō (“to discharge, release”) (ultimately from Proto-Indo-European *meyth₂- (“to change; to exchange; to remove”)) + -tiō (suffix attached to verbs forming nouns relating to actions or their results).
Alternatively, feminine of missus (“sent”)
An older derivation (16th century, attributed to Luther) adduced Hebrew מַצָּה (matsá, “unleavened bread; oblation”) (compare English matzo), but this is no longer considered a tenable etymology.
missa f (genitive missae); first declension
First-declension noun.
| singular | plural | |
|---|---|---|
| nominative | missa | missae |
| genitive | missae | missārum |
| dative | missae | missīs |
| accusative | missam | missās |
| ablative | missā | missīs |
| vocative | missa | missae |
missa
出典:Wikipedia
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miss a catch
to lose one's consciousness―fall unconscious―lose one's senses―fall senseless―fall insensible―fall into a swoon―swoon―faint
行方不明になる.
あせってじたばたする
| ・Missa | |
| ・called game | |
| ・luvvy | |
| ・recon | |
| ・wam | |
| ・A record | |
| ・lightning round | |
| ・control theory | |
| ・ballup | |
| ・GO WATCH |