nes
From Wiktionary, the free dictionary
From Wiktionary, the free dictionary
nes
Contraction of net soos.
nes
From Dutch nest, from Middle Dutch nest, from Old Dutch nest, from Proto-Germanic *nestaz, from Proto-Indo-European *nisdós.
nes (present nes, present participle nestende, past participle genes)
A compound *ne + *-s, from Proto-Indo-European *nō kwe. From Proto-Albanian *(e)nō ̊, from Proto-Indo-European *(h1)nē̆-, *(h1)nō̆- (“after, behind, next to/after”). Cognate to Ancient Greek ἔνη(ς) (énē(s)), ἔνας (énas, “the day after tomorrow”) and Gothic 𐌽𐌴𐍈 (nēƕ, “after”).
nes
Probably from an earlier form *cun ãsu, from Vulgar Latin *cum ipso, from *ipsus or Latin ipsum, from ipse, or from metathesis of a form *ãns. Compare Romanian dânsul, îns.
nes m (feminine nese, masculine plural nesh, feminine plural nesi)
From a contraction of the preposition en (“in”) + feminine plural article les (“the”).
nes f pl (masculine sg nel, feminine sg na, neuter sg no, masculine plural nos)
nes pl
nes
From Middle Dutch nesse, from Old Dutch nesse, from Proto-Germanic *nasją. Equivalent to an ablauting secondary form of neus (“nose”).
nes f (plural nessen, diminutive nesje n)
From Old Norse nes (“headland”), from Proto-Germanic *nasją. Kindred words are Old English næs (English ness and naze); Swedish näs, German nase; Latin nasus (“a nose”) as the Icelandic nös (“nose”).
nes n (genitive singular nes, plural nes)
From Old Norse nes (“headland”), from Proto-Germanic *nasją. Cognate with Old English næs (> English ness and naze); Swedish näs, German Nase. Compare also Latin nasus (“nose”) and Icelandic nös (“nostril”).
nes n (genitive singular ness, nominative plural nes)
nēs
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