Contionary:et

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Avendonian

Pronunciation

  • (Central Avendonian) IPA(key): [et]

Etymology

From Proto-Germanic *it.

Pronoun

et

  1. third-person singular pronoun; it

See also

Avendonian personal pronouns
personal pronouns possessive
pronoun
subjective objective
first
person
singular eo me mede
plural vi nos nosde
second
person
singular familiar tu te tede
formal Si Side
plural i vos vosde
third
person
singular masculine e si side
feminine si
neuter et
plural si

Bearlandic

Pronunciation

(Bearlandic) IPA: /ˈeːt/

Verb

et

  1. to eat
    Hi ati a appoll.
    He ate an apple.


Inflection

Present et
Past ati
Perfect giotē
Byform ytē
Present participle etnē
Past participle giotnē

Nanyse

Alternative Forms

ɔϯ (Dumun script)

Etymology

From the Hittite word wett, meaning year.

Pronunciation

  • (Nanyse Proper) IPA: /ɛt/
  • (Kote Dialect) IPA: /ɛð/
  • (Jara Dialect) IPA: /ɛd/
  • (Yrem Dialect) IPA: /ɛtʃ/

Noun

et i (plural: etz; etza; etet)

  1. A year
  2. The orbital period of Kisar moving around Sol.
  3. A measurement of time made up of twelve ytyt, or months

Derived Terms

Niemish

Pronunciation

  • IPA: /ə/ or (before a vowel) /ən/

Etymology

From Gothic áins.

Article

et n.n. hard stem

  1. a, an

Declension

Notes

In deliberately archaising speech, et, en, es, em, e are pronounced /ɛt, ɛn, ɛm, ɛ/, however in ordinary speech these have all fallen together as /ə/ (/ən/ before a vowel). Use of the indefinite article is also optional if an adjective appears before the noun, and the decision to use it or not usually depends on euphonic considerations (e.g. it is rare to use the article if the previous word in the utterance ends in a vowel).