siren
From Wiktionary, the free dictionary
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From Wiktionary, the free dictionary
From Middle English siren, from Old French sereine and Latin Sīrēn, Sīrēna, from Ancient Greek Σειρήν (Seirḗn). The mammalian sense was first attested in French in Dominique Bouhours, Les entretiens d'Ariste et d'Eugène, in 1671. The aquatic salamander sense was originally introduced by Linnaeus in 1766, for a genus of his reptiles. Doublet of serin.
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siren (plural sirens or sirenes)
The sound of a civil defense siren
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siren (third-person singular simple present sirens, present participle sirening, simple past and past participle sirened)
siren
sìren (Cyrillic spelling сѝрен)
Borrowed from Latin Sīrēn, from Ancient Greek Σειρήν (Seirḗn).
siren c
siren (definite accusative sireni, plural sirenler)
siren f (not mutable)
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