From Proto-Central Pacific *vua , from Proto-Oceanic *puaq , from Proto-Malayo-Polynesian *buaq , from Proto-Austronesian *buaq .
vua
fruit ( part of plant )
fruit ( food )
vua
to bear fruit
Gatty, Ronald (2009 ) “vua”, in Fijian-English Dictionary , Suva, Fiji: Ronald Gatty, →ISBN , page 307
From vu + -a .
vua
your : belonging to you ( formal, singular )
From Vietnamese vua .
vua
king
From Proto-Bantu *-dúʊda .
-vua (infinitive kuvua )
Conversive form of -vaa : to undress
Conjugation of -vua
Positive present
-na vua
Subjunctive
-vue
Negative
-vui
Imperative singular
vua
Infinitives
Imperatives
Singular
vua
Plural
vueni
Tensed forms
Habitual
huvua
Positive past
positive subject concord + -li vua
Negative past
negative subject concord + -ku vua
Positive present (positive subject concord + -na vua)
Singular
Plural
1st person
ni navua/na vua
tu navua
2nd person
u navua
m navua
3rd person
m-wa(I/II)
a navua
wa navua
other classes
positive subject concord + -na vua
Negative present (negative subject concord + -vui )
Singular
Plural
1st person
si vui
hatu vui
2nd person
hu vui
ham vui
3rd person
m-wa(I/II)
ha vui
hawa vui
other classes
negative subject concord + -vui
Positive future
positive subject concord + -ta vua
Negative future
negative subject concord + -ta vua
Positive subjunctive (positive subject concord + -vue )
Singular
Plural
1st person
ni vue
tu vue
2nd person
u vue
m vue
3rd person
m-wa(I/II)
a vue
wa vue
other classes
positive subject concord + -vue
Negative subjunctive
positive subject concord + -si vue
Positive present conditional
positive subject concord + -nge vua
Negative present conditional
positive subject concord + -singe vua
Positive past conditional
positive subject concord + -ngali vua
Negative past conditional
positive subject concord + -singali vua
Perfect
positive subject concord + -me vua
"Already"
positive subject concord + -mesha vua
"Not yet"
negative subject concord + -ja vua
"If/When"
positive subject concord + -ki vua
"If not"
positive subject concord + -sipo vua
Consecutive
kavua / positive subject concord + -ka vua
Consecutive subjunctive
positive subject concord + -ka vue
Some forms not commonly seen in modern Standard Swahili are absent from the table. See Appendix:Swahili verbs for more information.
From Proto-Bantu *-dùba .
-vua (infinitive kuvua )
to fish
Conjugation of -vua
Positive present
-na vua
Subjunctive
-vue
Negative
-vui
Imperative singular
vua
Infinitives
Imperatives
Singular
vua
Plural
vueni
Tensed forms
Habitual
huvua
Positive past
positive subject concord + -li vua
Negative past
negative subject concord + -ku vua
Positive present (positive subject concord + -na vua)
Singular
Plural
1st person
ni navua/na vua
tu navua
2nd person
u navua
m navua
3rd person
m-wa(I/II)
a navua
wa navua
other classes
positive subject concord + -na vua
Negative present (negative subject concord + -vui )
Singular
Plural
1st person
si vui
hatu vui
2nd person
hu vui
ham vui
3rd person
m-wa(I/II)
ha vui
hawa vui
other classes
negative subject concord + -vui
Positive future
positive subject concord + -ta vua
Negative future
negative subject concord + -ta vua
Positive subjunctive (positive subject concord + -vue )
Singular
Plural
1st person
ni vue
tu vue
2nd person
u vue
m vue
3rd person
m-wa(I/II)
a vue
wa vue
other classes
positive subject concord + -vue
Negative subjunctive
positive subject concord + -si vue
Positive present conditional
positive subject concord + -nge vua
Negative present conditional
positive subject concord + -singe vua
Positive past conditional
positive subject concord + -ngali vua
Negative past conditional
positive subject concord + -singali vua
Perfect
positive subject concord + -me vua
"Already"
positive subject concord + -mesha vua
"Not yet"
negative subject concord + -ja vua
"If/When"
positive subject concord + -ki vua
"If not"
positive subject concord + -sipo vua
Consecutive
kavua / positive subject concord + -ka vua
Consecutive subjunctive
positive subject concord + -ka vue
Some forms not commonly seen in modern Standard Swahili are absent from the table. See Appendix:Swahili verbs for more information.
( North Central Vietnam ) bua (without lenition)
The Northern Middle Vietnamese form ꞗua ( “ king ” ) with lenition is attested in Dictionarium Annamiticum Lusitanum et Latinum .
Compare North Central Vietnamese bua without lenition and the compound phân bua . Compare also Mang pua² and Tai Dam ꪜꪺ , borrowed from an older form of Vietnamese. Cognate with Chut [Mày] tapuo¹ (Babaev & Samarina, 2018).
Attested in Phật thuyết đại báo phụ mẫu ân trọng kinh (佛說大報父母恩重經) as 𢃊 , composed of 司 (MC si ) + 布 (MC puH ) (modern SV : tư bố ).
(classifier vị , đức , nhà ) vua • (𤤰 , 𢃊 , 𪻟 )
a monarch ( ruler )
Phan Châu Trinh Đạo đức và luân lí Đông Tây [Eastern and Western Ideas on Morality and Ethics ]:
Một nước bao nhiêu triệu dân mà chỉ giao phó quyền chính cho một ông vua thì chẳng là ngu xuẩn lắm ư? Gặp được ông vua thông minh còn e lo chưa hết bổn phận thay, huống là gặp phải anh vua u mê làm ròng những sự độc ác, cấm dân có ăn học không được lo việc nước, thì dân có ăn học không được lo việc nước, thì dân khốn khổ biết bao, và còn có ai dám ra mà gánh vác. Một nhà không ai lo chủ trương, một nước không ai lo chủ trương, thì nhà nước ấy làm sao không tan không mất được. A country with millions of subjects under the rule of a single monarch, does that not sound foolish? It's not even guaranteed a bright monarch can rule to his full capacity, so if there's a dim monarch who indulges in cruelty, who bans his educated subjects from contributing, those subjects can't contribute, everyone suffers, who would be willing to take responsibility then? A home without anyone taking charge, a country without anyone taking charge, is it surprising that it falls?
(classifier con ) vua
( chess ) a king
This word is usually translated as "king", but in East Asian historical contexts, kings and queens such as Hùng Vương ( 雄王 , “ Hùng King ” ) , Trưng Vương ( 徵 王 , “ Queen Trưng ” ) ; some sorts of "lords" such as Lạc Long Quân ( 雒龍君 , “ Dragon Lord Lạc ” ) ; and emperors and empresses such as Mai Hắc Đế ( 梅 黑 帝 , “ Black Emperor Mai ” ) , Lí Nam Đế ( 李 南 帝 , “ Southern Emperor Lí ” ) , Lí Chiêu Hoàng ( 李 昭 皇 , “ Empress Lí Chiêu ” ) have all been generically referred to as vua . Effectively, this word is an umbrella term for different kinds of monarchs, such as vương /quốc vương ( “ king; sultan ” ) , hoàng /đế /hoàng đế .
Except the Emperor of Japan (thiên hoàng ( literally “ Heavenly Emperor ” ) or Nhật hoàng ( literally “ Japanese Emperor ” ) ), tsars (sa hoàng ( literally “ Tsa r Emperor ” ) or (Nga hoàng ( literally “ Russian emperor ” ) ) and female monarchs (nữ hoàng ( “ queen regnant ” , literally “ empress regnant ” ) ), most modern monarchs are called quốc vương .
vua • (𤤰 , 𢃊 , 𪻟 )
( of an insect ) being a king
mối vua ― a king termite
ong vua ― a drone