Central Huasteca Nahuatl

edit

Pronunciation

edit
  This entry needs pronunciation information. If you are familiar with the IPA then please add some!

Noun

edit

nane

  1. Miss.
edit

Eastern Huasteca Nahuatl

edit

Noun

edit

nane

  1. Miss
edit

Italian

edit

Pronunciation

edit
  • IPA(key): /ˈna.ne/
  • Rhymes: -ane
  • Hyphenation: nà‧ne

Adjective

edit

nane

  1. feminine plural of nano

Noun

edit

nane f

  1. plural of nana

Anagrams

edit

Latin

edit

Pronunciation

edit

Noun

edit

nāne

  1. vocative singular of nānus

Manx

edit

Pronunciation

edit

Numeral

edit

nane

  1. Alternative form of unnane

Portuguese

edit

Verb

edit

nane

  1. inflection of nanar:
    1. first/third-person singular present subjunctive
    2. third-person singular imperative

Scots

edit

Alternative forms

edit

Etymology

edit

From Middle English noon, from Old English nān, from ne (not) + ān (one). Compare English none.

Pronunciation

edit

Pronoun

edit

nane

  1. none
  2. neither (of two)

Determiner

edit

nane

  1. none

Adverb

edit

nane (comparative mair nane, superlative maist nane)

  1. (emphatic) not at all

References

edit

Swahili

edit
Swahili numbers (edit)
80
 ←  7 8 9  → [a], [b]
    Cardinal: -nane
    Ordinal: -a nane

Etymology

edit

From nne na nne (four and four).[1]

Pronunciation

edit
  • Audio (Kenya):(file)

Numeral

edit

-nane (declinable)

  1. eight

Usage notes

edit

Some speakers consider this word to be invariable.

Inflection

edit

Noun

edit

nane (n class, plural nane)

  1. (card games) eight

Derived terms

edit

Coordinate terms

edit

See also

edit
Playing cards in Swahili · karata za kucheza (layout · text)
             
ree, rea, rei mbili tatu nne tano sita saba
             
nane tisa kumi ghulamu, mzungu wa tatu malkia, mzungu wa pili, bibi mfalme, mzungu wa nne, basha jokari

References

edit
  1. ^ Batibo, Herman M. (2018) “Over 1,000 Years of Contact Between Arabic and the Eastern and Southern African Languages: A Case Study of Kiswahili and Setswana”, in Education and Linguistics Research[1], volume 4, number 2, →DOI, →ISSN, page 51 of 43-55:The numbers from six to nine were a problem in many Bantu languages, as they had to combine numbers, such as four plus four to make eight (nne na nne > nane (eight, in Kiswahili).

Turkish

edit

Etymology

edit

From Ottoman Turkish نعنع (nane) (compare Macedonian нана (nana), Serbo-Croatian на́на/nána), from Arabic نَعْنَاع (naʕnāʕ).

Pronunciation

edit

Noun

edit

nane (definite accusative naneyi, plural naneler)

  1. peppermint

Declension

edit
Inflection
Nominative nane
Definite accusative naneyi
Singular Plural
Nominative nane naneler
Definite accusative naneyi naneleri
Dative naneye nanelere
Locative nanede nanelerde
Ablative naneden nanelerden
Genitive nanenin nanelerin

See also

edit