Contionary:in

Braereth

Pronunciation & Variants

Official Classical Tenibvreth Eomentesa Merineth
/in/ [in] [in]
in
[in]
in
[in]
in

Etymology

From Latin in

Adposition

in

  1. in

Intralingua

Pronunciation

IPA: /ɪn/

Etymology

from Latin in, From earlier en, from Proto-Italic *en, from Proto-Indo-European *h₁én (“in”).

Preposition

  1. in
  2. into
  3. on


Reneissan

Alternative forms

Etymology

Pronunciation

(Reneissan) IPA: /ɛ̃/

Preposition

in

  1. 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

Sintsiran

Etymology

From Proto-Indo-European *h₁én (in)


Preposition

in

  1. in
  2. (+ dative) into


Skundavisk

Etymology

From Middle Skundavisk in, from Old Skundavisk in, from Halmisk ᛁᚾ (in), from Proto-Germanic *in.

Pronunciation

Preposition

in

  1. in
    Hwat doost thou in the kykne ?
    What are you doing in the kitchen ?

Usage notes

Synonyms

Derived terms

Related terms

Knrawi

Etymology

Inherited.

Pronunciation

⫽ɪ˥n⫽

Noun

in

  1. stripe, streak
    (please add the primary text of this usage example)
    (please add an English translation of this usage example)
in inflection
SG PL/INDEF
SGV PTV SGV PTV
GEN GEN GEN GEN
NOM/DAT inǵ inĝ inrí inrî ing̀ inĝ* inrì inrî*
ACC in în ziin zîin ìn în* zìin zîin*
LOC sg inǵ sĝ inĝ sr inrí sr̂ inrî sg̀ ing̀ sĝ inĝ* sr̀ inrì sr̂ inrî*
*low falling tone in some regions

Derived terms