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de
1[duh, duh, de, di]
preposition
from; of (used in French, Spanish, and Portuguese personal names, originally to indicate place of origin).
Comte de Rochambeau; Don Ricardo de Aragón.
DE
2abbreviation
Delaware (approved especially for use with zip code).
de'
3[duh, de]
preposition
dei (used in Italian names as an elided form ofdei ).
de' Medici.
de-
4a prefix occurring in loanwords from Latin (decide ); also used to indicate privation, removal, and separation (dehumidify ), negation (demerit; derange ), descent (degrade; deduce ), reversal (detract ), intensity (decompound ).
D.E.
5abbreviation
Doctor of Engineering.
driver education.
de-
1prefix
removal of or from something specified
deforest
dethrone
reversal of something
decode
decompose
desegregate
departure from
decamp
DE
2abbreviation
(formerly in Britain) Department of Employment
Delaware
de
3/ də /
of; from: occurring as part of some personal names and originally indicating place of origin
Simon de Montfort
D'Arcy
de la Mare
de
4abbreviation
Germany
Word History and Origins
Origin of de1
Word History and Origins
Origin of de1
Origin of de2
Example Sentences
But the pièce de résistance of her spooky spread?
One was allegedly trying to board a flight at Roissy-Charles de Gaulle Airport.
“Sudan is now de facto partitioned into two competing halves,” said Alan Boswell, a Sudan analyst with the International Crisis Group, a Brussels-based think tank.
At its core, the conflict is an ethnically tinged power struggle between Sudan’s de facto president, Lt.
In the French capital's Gare de Lyon, all trains to the southern port city of Marseille had been cancelled, and travellers stood in long queues trying to rebook.
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