vassalo
Old Galician-Portuguese
    
    Etymology
    
From Medieval Latin vassallus (“manservant, domestic, retainer”), from vassus (“servant”), from Gaulish uassos (“young man, squire”).
Pronunciation
    
- IPA(key): /va.ˈs̺a.l̪o/
Noun
    
vassalo m (plural vassalos)
- vassal; subject
-  13th century CE, Alfonso X of Castile, Cantigas de Santa Maria, E codex, cantiga 3 (facsimile):- Eſta é de como ſanta maria fez cobrar a Theophilo a carta que fezera cono demo u ſe tornou ſeu vaſſalo.
- This one is (about) how Holy Mary recovered for Theophilos the contract he had made with the Devil and became his vassal.
 
 
- Eſta é de como ſanta maria fez cobrar a Theophilo a carta que fezera cono demo u ſe tornou ſeu vaſſalo.
 
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Portuguese
    
    Alternative forms
    
- vassallo (obsolete)
Etymology
    
From Old Galician-Portuguese vassalo, from Medieval Latin vassallus (“manservant, domestic, retainer”), from vassus (“servant”), from Gaulish uassos (“young man, squire”).
Pronunciation
    
- (Brazil) IPA(key): /vaˈsa.lu/
- (Southern Brazil) IPA(key): /vaˈsa.lo/
 
- (Portugal) IPA(key): /vɐˈsa.lu/
Derived terms
    
- avassalar, vassalagem, vassalar
Adjective
    
vassalo (feminine vassala, masculine plural vassalos, feminine plural vassalas, not comparable)
- subordinate
- Synonyms: sujeito, subordinado
 
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