English

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Etymology 1

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Noun

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a-a (uncountable)

  1. Alternative form of aa.
    • 1883, Clarence E. Dutton, Fourth Annual report of the United States Geological Survey:
      The second form of the lavas is called by the natives a-a, and its contrast with pahoehoe is about the greatest imaginable. It consists mainly of clinkers sometimes detached, sometimes partially agglutinated together with a bristling array of sharp, jagged, angular fragments.

Etymology 2

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Adjective

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a-a (not comparable)

  1. Abbreviation of air-to-air.

Hiligaynon

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Interjection

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á-a

  1. an exclamation of sorrow or anguish

Interjection

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a-â

  1. now then
  2. fie

Ligurian

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Etymology

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a (at”, “to) + a f sg (the, definite article)

Pronunciation

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Contraction

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a-a

  1. at the, to the (+ a feminine noun in singular)

Northern Sami

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Interjection

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a-a

  1. no