lass

Etymology
From, from. Cognate with 🇨🇬.

Noun

 * 1)  A young woman or girl.
 * 2)  A sweetheart.
 * 1)  A sweetheart.
 * 1)  A sweetheart.
 * 1)  A sweetheart.
 * 1)  A sweetheart.

Usage notes
Still prevalent in Scottish English, Irish English, North East England, Lancashire and Yorkshire. Sometimes used poetically in other dialects of English.

Translations

 * Arabic: صبية
 * Breton: ,
 * Bulgarian: ,
 * Cebuano: dalaga
 * Czech:, děvenka,
 * Danish: tøs
 * Esperanto: junulino
 * Finnish:
 * French:, , ,  , ,
 * German: ,
 * Greek:
 * Ancient: κοράσιον
 * Hebrew: ילדה (yaldá), (na'ará) , בחורה (bakhurá),  ('almá)
 * Hungarian: ,
 * Irish:, maighdean, gearrchaile
 * Korean:
 * Macedonian: моме, девојче
 * Occitan: tosa,
 * Persian:
 * Plautdietsch: Mejal, Mäakjen
 * Portuguese:, , ,
 * Russian: ,
 * Scottish Gaelic:, ,  , ,
 * Spanish:, , , ,
 * Swedish:, ,
 * Tagalog: ining,, neneng
 * Welsh:, , rhiain

Etymology
From, from , variant of. Compare for the short vowel Ripuarian 🇨🇬, 🇨🇬. The uninflected stem of this adjective develops regularly into, while the inflected stem yields the doublet. See the English cognate for more.

Adjective

 * 1) loose, unattached

Etymology
. Originally the past participle of a verb derived from. .

Noun

 * 1) a load (amount transported at one time (on a cart, (open) trailer, or the like, or carried), also as an (informal) unit of measurement)
 * 2) a load (large amount)
 * 1) a load (large amount)

Usage notes
Possibly also including the conveyance itself intuitively, like in the second image.

Etymology 1
From, from.

Noun

 * 1) loss