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Etymology edit · Inherited from Latin dulcem (“sweet”). Also found in Old Spanish with the forms duz, duce (compare Portuguese doce). ... Cognate with English ...
Asturian edit. Adjective edit. dulces. plural of dulce. Latin edit. Adjective edit. dulcēs. nominative/accusative/vocative plural of dulcis. Verb edit.
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dulce, comparative dulcior, superlative dulcissimus, adverb dulcē or dulciter); third-declension two-termination adjective. (of taste) sweet quotations ▽.
Dulce may refer to: Contents. 1 Places; 2 People; 3 Music; 4 Food and drink; 5 See also. Places edit · Dulce, New Mexico, United States, a census-designated ...
dulce · 1 of 3. adjective. obsolete. : sweet to the taste : soothing, agreeable. dulce · 2 of 3. noun. dul·​ce. ˈdül(ˌ)sā. plural -s. 1. Southwest : sweetmeat, ...
Pronunciation edit · (Classical Latin) IPA: /ˈdul.ke ˈbel.lum i.nekˈsper.tiːs/, [ˈd̪ʊɫ̪kɛ ˈbɛlːʲʊ̃ˑ ɪnɛkˈs̠pɛrt̪iːs̠] · (modern Italianate Ecclesiastical) IPA: /ˈdul.