humano
humano (femininehumana,masculine pluralhumanos,feminine pluralhumanas)
hūmānō
FromOld Galician-Portuguesehumano,umano (displacing collateral formhumão), fromLatinhūmānus. Cognate withGalician andSpanishhumano,Catalanhumà,Occitan andRomanianuman,Frenchhumain,Italianumano.
humano (femininehumana,masculine pluralhumanos,feminine pluralhumanas)
humano m (pluralhumanos,femininehumana,feminine pluralhumanas)
humano
hȕmāno (Cyrillic spellingху̏ма̄но)
FromLatinhūmānus, fromhomō(“human being”).
humano (femininehumana,masculine pluralhumanos,feminine pluralhumanas)
humano m (pluralhumanos,femininehumana,feminine pluralhumanas)
humano
Borrowed fromSpanishhumano, but with the silent⟨h⟩ pronounced as/h/, most likely due to English influence (comparealkohol,Hispanismo,Hinduismo,homiliya,nihilismo,rehabilitasyon), or possibly due to a desire to differentiate from similar words, namelyumano (comparehistorya).
humano (Baybayin spellingᜑᜓᜋᜈᜓ)