Contionary:in: Difference between revisions
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==[[Braereth]]== | |||
[[Category: Contionary]] | |||
[[Category: Braereth words]] | |||
[[Category: Braereth adpositions]] | |||
{{Template: Braereth Dialects|in|in|in|in|in|in|in|in}} | |||
===Etymology=== | |||
From [[w: Latin|Latin]] '''''[[wikt: in|in]]''''' | |||
===Adposition=== | |||
'''in''' | |||
# in | |||
== [[Intralingua]] == | == [[Intralingua]] == | ||
=== Pronunciation === | === Pronunciation === |
Revision as of 21:03, 5 January 2023
Braereth
Pronunciation & Variants
Official | Classical | Tenibvreth | Eomentesa | Merineth |
---|---|---|---|---|
/in/ | [in] | [in] ⟪in⟫ |
[in] ⟨in⟩ |
[in] ⧼in⧽ |
Etymology
Adposition
in
- in
Intralingua
Pronunciation
IPA: /ɪn/
Etymology
from Latin in, From earlier en, from Proto-Italic *en, from Proto-Indo-European *h₁én (“in”).
Preposition
- in
- into
- on
Reneissan
Alternative forms
Etymology
Pronunciation
(Reneissan) IPA: /ɛ̃/
Preposition
in
- in, at
Derived terms
When followed by a definite article, in is combined with the article to give the following combined forms:
in + article | combined form |
---|---|
in + il | nel |
in + i | nei |
in + la | nella |
in + lai | nellai |
in + l' | nell' |
in + lais | nellais |
Skundavisk
Etymology
From Middle Skundavisk in, from Old Skundavisk in, from Halmisk ᛁᚾ (in), from Proto-Germanic *in.
Pronunciation
- IPA: /ɪn/
Preposition
in
- in
- Hwat doost thou in the kykne ?
- What are you doing in the kitchen ?
- Hwat doost thou in the kykne ?