πΌπ°π½π½π°
Gothic
Etymology
From Proto-Germanic *mann-; cognate to Old English mann (English man).
Noun
πΌπ°π½π½π° β’ (manna) m
Usage notes
Often used similar to the pronominal uses of one in English, or men in Dutch, especially in the common locution π½πΉ πΌπ°π½π½π° (ni manna, βnobodyβ).
Declension
| Masculine mixed an/consonant stem | ||
|---|---|---|
| Singular | Plural | |
| Nominative | πΌπ°π½π½π° manna |
πΌπ°π½π, πΌπ°π½π½π°π½π mans, mannans |
| Vocative | πΌπ°π½π½π° manna |
πΌπ°π½π, πΌπ°π½π½π°π½π mans, mannans |
| Accusative | πΌπ°π½π½π°π½ mannan |
πΌπ°π½π, πΌπ°π½π½π°π½π mans, mannans |
| Genitive | πΌπ°π½π mans |
πΌπ°π½π½π΄ mannΔ |
| Dative | πΌπ°π½π½ mann |
πΌπ°π½π½π°πΌ mannam |
Synonyms
Derived terms
- π°π»π°πΌπ°π½π (alamans, βall of humanityβ)
- πΌπ°π½π°ππ΄πΈπ (manasΔΓΎs, βmankindβ)
- πΌπ°π½π½π°π·πΏπ½ (mannahun, βanyoneβ)
This article is issued from
Wiktionary.
The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike.
Additional terms may apply for the media files.