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ne

From Wiktionary, the free dictionary
See also:Appendix:Variations of "ne"
Languages (86)
Translingual • English
Abinomn • Afar • Ahtna • Ainu • Albanian • Blagar • Breton • Catalan • Chuukese • Czech • Dalmatian • Deg • Dutch • Eastern Huasteca Nahuatl • Esperanto • Finnish • French • Gagauz • German • German Low German • Gothic • Huichol • Hungarian • Ido • Ingrian • Isthmus Zapotec • Istro-Romanian • Italian • Japanese • Kalasha • Kapampangan • Karaim • Karelian • Ladin • Latin • Latvian • Lithuanian • Livonian • Luganda • Mandarin • Mezquital Otomi • Middle Dutch • Middle English • Middle French • Mohawk • Negerhollands • Nheengatu • Northern Kurdish • Northern Ndebele • Norwegian Nynorsk • Old Czech • Old Dutch • Old English • Old French • Old Frisian • Old Saxon • Old Tupi • Pali • Phuthi • Polish • Rawang • Romanian • Saterland Frisian • Scots • Serbo-Croatian • Skou • Slovak • Slovene • Southern Ndebele • Sumerian • Swazi • Tagalog • Ternate • Turkish • Tuvaluan • Unami • Ura (Vanuatu) • Votic • Welsh • West Makian • Xhosa • Yup'ik • Zou • Zulu
Page categories

Translingual

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Etymology

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Clipping ofEnglishNepali orNepaliनेपाली(nepālī).

Symbol

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ne

  1. (international standards)ISO 639-1language code forNepali.

See also

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English

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Pronunciation

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Etymology 1

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FromMiddle Englishne, fromOld Englishne, fromProto-West Germanic*ne, fromProto-Germanic*ne, fromProto-Indo-European*né.

Cognates includeGothic𐌽𐌹(ni),Latin,Sanskrit(na),Bulgarian,Serbo-Croatian andRussianне(ne),Lithuanianne,Irish.

Adverb

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ne (notcomparable)

  1. (obsolete or deliberately archaic)Not.
    • c1500,Melusine (translation):
      For shene dare doo, but to commande.
    • 1512,Robert Copland,The History of Helyas, Knight of The Swan[1]:
      And whan the good quene herde these pyteous tydynges lytel lacked that thene dyed for sorowe / wherfore all lamentably the began to complayne her sayenge.
    • c1520,Andria by Terence (translation):
      This shold haue bene his skuce at the lest / And itne had bene but good & honest.
    • c1520,Andria by Terence (translation):
      O so incessaunt thow ad in thy desyre / For so that thow thy mynde now mayst haue / Thowne caryst what thow dost requyre.
    • 1550,The Mirror for Magistrates:
      For hene had, nor could increase his line.
    • 1562,Arthur Brooke,The Tragical History of Romeus and Juliet:
      In geving me to him whom Ine can,ne may,ne ought to love.
    • 1576,William Lambarde,A perambulation of Kent[2]:
      Mary (quoth the king) so might me mine,ne haddest thou been Earle Godwine: casting in his dish the murder of his brother Alfred, which was done to death at Elie by the Counsell of Godwine.
    • 1579, Immeritô [pseudonym;Edmund Spenser],The Shepheardes Calender: [], London: [] Hugh Singleton, [],→OCLC:
      Ne durst again his fieri face out-show.
    • 1587, George Gascoigne, Francis Kinwelmershe,Jocasta:
      Ioc: How can that be and thou my ioy in warre? Po: Henceforthn'am I your ioy ne yet your sonne.
    • c.1590,William Fowler,The Works of William Fowler[3]:
      What happs might chance me Ine knewe.
    • 1590,Edmund Spenser, “(please specify the book)”, inThe Faerie Queene. [], London: [] [John Wolfe] forWilliam Ponsonbie,→OCLC:
      His forces faile,ne can no lenger fight.
    • 1590,Edmund Spenser, “(please specify the book)”, inThe Faerie Queene. [], London: [] [John Wolfe] forWilliam Ponsonbie,→OCLC:
      As when a ship, that flyes faire vnder saile, / An hidden rocke escaped hath vnwares, / That lay in waite her wrack for to bewaile, / The Marriner yet halfe amazed stares / At perill past, and yet it doubtne dares / To ioy at his foole-happie ouersight.
    • 1591,John Phillip,A Commemoration on the Life and Death of the Right Honourable, Sir Christopher Hatton:
      And now sweete death most welcome vnto mee, thy stroakesne can,ne shall me once dismay.
    • 1592,Robert Greene,A Looking Glass for London:
      And twenty thousand infants thatne wot the right hand from the left.
    • 1607,Thomas Walkington,The Optick Glasse of Humors[4]:
      But when he spoke, his plenteous words did flow / Like to thick-falling flakes of winter snow, /Ne any couth his wit so hiely straine.
    • 1614,John Davies of Hereford,Eclogue Between Young Willy the SInger of His Native Pastorals, and Old Wernocke His Friend[5]:
      Now, siker ( Wernocke ) thou hast split the marke / Albe that Ine wot I han mis-song: / But, for I am so yong, I dread my warke / Woll be misualued both of old and yong.
    • 1812,Lord Byron,Childe Harold's Pilgrimage, Canto I, 2:
      Whilom in Albion's isle there dwelt a youth, / Whone in virtue's ways did take delight [...].
    • 2019, James Meek,To Calais, In Ordinary Time:
      "God's nails, Ine knew her. I went to another stead in the yard to be further from her cries."

Conjunction

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ne

  1. (obsolete)Nor.
    • 1484, Original Letters,King Edward the Fifth, under the direction of his Uncle, to Otes Gilbert, Esq., commanding him to receive Knighthood at the expected Coronation[6]:
      That than I shall not geve therunto faithne credence, nor therfore put them to any maner ponyssement, before that they or any of them so accused may be at their lawful defence and answer.
    • 1489,The gouernayle of helthe[7]:
      And therin is no drede nor bytternesne expences, but therin is pure recreacyon of body and of soule soo it be donn in clene places.
    • 1489,The gouernayle of helthe[8]:
      Be not to hastyne sodenly vengeable, to poure folke doo no vyolence.
    • 1489,The gouernayle of helthe[9]:
      Moreouer no man be so hardy to drynk fastyng cold water,ne after that he hath accompanyed wyth a woman,ne after gret trauayle,ne after exersice tyll he haue fyrst rested hym,ne by nyght namely yf he haue do gloue tofore.
    • 1500,The Example of Euyll Tongues:
      A false tonge wyll euer Imagyne and saye / That neuer by creature was saydne thought.
    • 1509,Wynkyn de Worde,The fyftene joyes of maryage[10]:
      For chastyce can he not by dayene nyght his wyfe but by his betynge maketh lyght and hote the loue bytwene her and her frende.
    • 1511,The Records of the City of Norwich[11]:
      Item, that noo woman nor maide weyve any worsted stamyngesne sayes for that that thei be nott of sufficient powre to werke the said worsteddes as thei owte to be wrought, upon payne of iij s iiij d as often as thei be founde wevyng to be devyded and leuyed in maner and forme aboue expressed.
    • 1520,Richard Pynson,The Lyfe of The Blessed Martyr Saynte Thomas[12]:
      That they shulde no lenger kepene susteyne Thomas the archebysshope.
    • 1526,The Grete Herball[13]:
      The rote ought to be gadered in the begynnynge of somer and dryed in the sonne bycause [tha]¬t it corruptne rotte bycause of the moystnesse[,] & it may be kept two yeres;
    • 1535,Thomas Elyot,The Education or Bringing up of Children:
      For lyinge is a detestable vice, and to be hated of all men,ne to be suffred amonge seruantisne other persones[,] howe poure estate so euer they be of.
    • 1542,Nicholas Udall,Apophthegms (translation):
      Thus some persones beeyng inuited and exhorted to falle to the studie of lettres, make their excuse that thei bee sickely, that thei can not slepene take their naturall reste in the nightes.
    • 1558,Thomas Phaer,The Aeneid (translation):
      We Moores be not so base of wit,ne yet so blunt of mynd.
    • c.1560, Edward Gosynhill,The Schoolhouse of Women[14]:
      The deuyll gossyp, ought me a shame / And prayde I am nowe, euerye penye I wolde god he had, be blinde and lame / The daye and houre, he fyrste woed me / Ware not gossyp, these chyldren thre I wolde not tary, ye may be sure / Longer with hym, dayene houre.
    • 1562,Arthur Brooke,The Tragical History of Romeus and Juliet:
      Neither extremitie,ne gentle meanes could boote; she hydeth close within her brest, her secret sorowes roote.
    • 1562,Arthur Brooke,The Tragical History of Romeus and Juliet:
      Ne on her teares or plaint, at all to have remorse, but (if they can not with her will,) to bring the mayde perforce.
    • 1570,John Thynne,The Debate betweene Pride and Lowlines[15]:
      His hart encreaseth not therebyne lesseth as edoon these fooles.
    • 1577,The Hereford Municipal Manuscript[16]:
      And that no victualerne other person or persons forestall any kynde of victualls cominge to the said Cyty or within the precyncte of the same before the same victualls be come to the place.
    • 1587, George Gascoigne, Francis Kinwelmershe,Jocasta:
      Ioc: How can that be and thou my ioy in warre? Po: Henceforth n'am I your ioyne yet your sonne.
    • 1590,Edmund Spenser, “Book III, Canto I”, inThe Faerie Queene. [], London: [] [John Wolfe] forWilliam Ponsonbie,→OCLC:
      But to her cry they list not lenden eare, /Ne ought the more their mightie strokes surceasse.
    • 1634, W. Lathum,(Please provide the book title or journal name):
      Whose worth all outward is in shew alone / But inward sent hath not,ne vertue none.
    • 1798,Samuel Coleridge,The Rime of the Ancient Mariner,ll. 443-6:
      The pang, the curse, with which they died, / Had never pass'd away; / I could not draw my een from theirs /Ne turn them up to pray.
Usage notes
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  • Ne survives only as part of theoral tradition in rural Scotland and Northern England. It is almost never used in common speech.
Related terms
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Etymology 2

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FromMaori.

Adverb

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ne (notcomparable)

  1. (New Zealand) "Isn't that so?" (used in representations of Maori English).[from 19th c.]
    • 1983,Keri Hulme,The Bone People, Penguin, published1986, page 6:
      Then, he had only chuckled again and said, “Well, we got him on the way,ne?”

Anagrams

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Abinomn

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Noun

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ne (dualnerom,pluralnekon)

  1. arrow (projectile)

Afar

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Pronunciation

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  • IPA(key): /ˈne/ [ˈnɛ]
  • Hyphenation:ne

Pronoun

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  1. we,us

Usage notes

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  • The formnée is used when the pronoun isn't followed by a clitic.

See also

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Afar personal pronouns
1st person2nd person3rd person
mf
subjectsingularanúatúúsukís
pluralnanúisínúsun
objectsingulartét
pluralsínkén

References

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  • E. M. Parker; R. J. Hayward (1985), “ne”, inAn Afar-English-French dictionary (with Grammatical Notes in English), University of London,→ISBN

Ahtna

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Postposition

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ne

  1. second-personsingular form of-e

Ainu

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Pronunciation

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Verb

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ne (Kana spelling)

  1. (intransitive, copulative) tobe,become
    Ainune ruwe ne.
    Heis an Ainu.

Derived terms

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See also

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  • an(to exist)

Albanian

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Alternative forms

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Etymology

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The nominative-accusative is from accusativeProto-Albanian*nōs, stressed form of cliticProto-Indo-European*nos, which is continued by the cliticna.[2]Neve andnesh are innovated, butGheg retains dativenahe (Old Albaniannae) from a genitive*nosōm.

Pronunciation

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Pronoun

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ne (accusativene,dativeneve,ablativenesh)

  1. we,us

Declension

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Forms ofne (1st person plural)
nominativene
ablativenesh
full formclitic
accusativenena
dativenevena
possessive adjectivepossessive pronoun
ynëyni

See also

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Albanian personal pronouns
singularplural
1st personunëne
2nd persontiju
3rd personmaiata
fajoato

References

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  1. ^Fialuur i voghel Sccyp e ltinisct (Small Dictionary of Albanian and Latin), page 85, by P. Jak Junkut, 1895,Sckoder
  2. ^Oryol, Vladimir E. (1998), “ne”, inAlbanian Etymological Dictionary, Leiden; Boston; Köln: Brill,→ISBN, page289

Blagar

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Noun

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ne

  1. human,person

References

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Breton

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Etymology

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FromProto-Brythonic*ni.

Particle

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ne

  1. not

Usage notes

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Used combined withket, mirroring Frenchne ...pas.

Catalan

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Pronunciation

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Pronoun

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ne (enclitic,contracted'n,procliticen,contracted procliticn')

  1. represents an indeterminate number or quantity of a given noun
  2. represents a place (associated with the action described by the verb) that would be introduced by the prepositionde
  3. replaces a phrase introduced by the prepositionde
  4. replaces the object of acausative verb

Usage notes

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  • ne cannot be used more than once as the object of a given verb.
  • Whilene is usually used to replace phrases beginning with the prepositionde, adverbial phrases (egde pressa) are replaced withhi.
  • ne is sometimes used instead ofho to replace an adjective or indefinite noun as the predicate of a verb.
  • ne is sometimes used popularly to add emphasis to a sentence: in this sense, it has no translation in English.
  • -ne is the full (plena) form of the pronoun. It is normally used after verbs ending with aconsonant or ⟨u⟩, or between some adverbs/pronouns and a verb. In some varieties of Catalan (Balearic/Valencian) it can also occur in sentence-initial position.

See also

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Catalan personal pronouns and clitics
strong/subjectweak (direct object)weak (indirect object)possessive
procliticencliticprocliticenclitic
singular1st
person
standardjo,mi3em,m’-me,’mem,m’-me,’mmeu
majestic1nósens-nos,’nsens-nos,’nsnostre
2nd
person
standardtuet,t’-te,’tet,t’-te,’tteu
formal1vósus-vos,-usus-vos,-usvostre
very formal2vostèel,l’-lo,’lli-liseu
3rd
person
mellel,l’-lo,’lli-liseu
fellala,l’4-lali-liseu
nho-holi-liseu
plural
1st personnosaltresens-nos,’nsens-nos,’nsnostre
2nd
person
standardvosaltresus-vos,-usus-vos,-usvostre
formal2vostèsels-los,’lsels-los,’lsseu
3rd
person
mellsels-los,’lsels-los,’lsseu
fellesles-lesels-los,’lsseu
3rd person reflexivesies,s’-se,’ses,s’-se,’sseu
adverbialablative/genitiveen,n’-ne,’n
locativehi-hi

1 Behaves grammatically as plural.  2 Behaves grammatically as third person.
3 Only as object of a preposition.  4 Not before unstressed (h)i-, (h)u-.

Chuukese

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Conjunction

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ne

  1. to (connects verbs)

Preposition

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ne

  1. Expressing a fraction or a ratio. Preceded by a nominator and followed by the denominator.

Czech

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Etymology

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inherited fromOld Czechne, fromProto-Slavic*ne, fromProto-Balto-Slavic*ne, fromProto-Indo-European*né.

Pronunciation

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Interjection

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ne

  1. no!

Particle

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ne

  1. not

See also

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Further reading

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Dalmatian

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Etymology

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FromLatinnec,neque. CompareItalian,Spanish,Catalan andFrenchni,Romaniannici.

Adverb

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ne

  1. neither

Deg

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Noun

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ne

  1. water

References

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Dutch

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Alternative forms

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  • nen(before vowels andb,d andt)

Etymology

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Fromnen throughapocope, itself a contraction ofeenen,enen, the now-obsolete accusative form ofeen.

Pronunciation

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Article

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ne

  1. (Belgium, colloquial)a,an
    ne man
    a man

Usage notes

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ne is used primarily in dialects that retain the three-way gender split. It is only used for masculine words, whileeen is used for feminine and neuter words.

The formnen is used before vowels (as the Englishan) and certain consonants (commonlyb,d andt), differing from dialect to dialect.

See also

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Anagrams

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Eastern Huasteca Nahuatl

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Determiner

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ne

  1. that.

Pronoun

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ne

  1. that.

Esperanto

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Etymology

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FromFrenchne,Polishnie,Russianне(ne), etc.

Pronunciation

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Particle

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ne

  1. no
  2. not
  3. non-

Antonyms

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Derived terms

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  • nei(to say no, to deny)
  • nee(rejectingly, denyingly, with the word no)
  • nea(negative, denying, rejecting)
  • kapnei(to shake one's head no)

Finnish

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Etymology

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FromProto-Finnic*nek, fromProto-Uralic*ne +*-k(dual ending). CompareErzyaне(ne),неть(neť).

The inflectional stemnii- derives from the same stem with the plural infix (-i-), through an older *nij- (< *ne-j-). Compare alsose.

Pronunciation

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Pronoun

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ne

  1. (demonstrative, of things and animals)nominativeplural ofse:they,those(objects not pointed at by the speaker)
  2. (colloquial, dialectal, of people)nominativeplural ofse:they
    Synonym:he

Determiner

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ne

  1. nominativeplural ofse:those(not pointed at by the speaker)
    Tässäne kirjat nyt ovat.
    This is wherethose books are now.

Usage notes

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See the usage notes underse.

Inflection

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The case suffixes are mostly regular (except the inessive and elative singular). Abessive is never used in the singular and extremely seldom in the plural. Instructiveniin is more or less a theoretical construction, since it has developed into an adverb, and its current meaning cannot be derived fromne.

Declension ofse
noun casesingularpluraladverbial formsingularplural
nominativesenesuperessivesiellä
genitivesenniiden,niittendelativesieltä
partitivesitäniitäsublativesinne
accusativese,sennelativesiis
inessivesiinäniissätemporalsilloin
elativesiitäniistäcausativesiten
illativesiihenniihinmultiplicative
adessivesilläniillädistributive
ablativesiltäniiltätemp. dist.
allativesilleniilleprolative
essivesinäniinäsituative
translativesiksiniiksioppositive
abessive(niittä)
instructive(niin)
comitativeniine

Descendants

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See also

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Finnish demonstratives
proximaldistalneutral
singulartämätuose
pluralnämänuone
*) See the usage notes undertuo for the difference betweense andtuo.
Finnish personal pronouns
firstsecondthird
familiarpolite
singularminäsinäTehän
pluralmetehe

Further reading

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Anagrams

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French

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Etymology

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FromMiddle French, fromOld Frenchnen orne preceding words starting in a consonant, fromLatinnōn.

Pronunciation

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Particle

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ne

  1. (literary)not (used alone to negate a verb, now chiefly with only a few particular verbs: seeusage notes)
    • 1713,Voltaire, letter, Dec 1713:
      Jene sais si je dois vous appeler Monsieur ou Mademoiselle[].
      I don't know if I should call you Mr or Miss.
    • 1826,Victor Hugo,Bug-Jargal, section XXXVIII:
      Le prince de France nous aime, celui d'Espagnene cesse de nous secourir.
      The prince of France loves us, that of Spain never stops helping us.
    • 1868,Emile Zola,Madeleine Férat:
      Jen'ose te jurer que je t'aime toujours, parce que je sens bien que tu ne me croirais pas.
      I dare not swear that I still love you, for I sense that you would not believe me.
    • 1943,Jean-Paul Sartre,Réflexions sur la question juive:
      Mais je ne le crois pas : un homme qui trouve naturel de dénoncer des hommesne peut avoir notre conception de l'humain[].
      But I don't think so: a man who finds it natural to denounce men cannot have our idea of being human.
    • 1963,Françoise Hardy,L'Amour s'en va:
      L'amour s'en va, et le tienne saurait durer.
      Love goes away, and yours willnot be able to last.
  2. not,no (used before a verb, with a coordinating negative element usually following; see Usage Notes, below)
    • 1851,Henri Murger,Le pays latin:
      Jene sais rien de plus odieux que l'hypocrisie.
      I don't know anything more odious than hypocrisy.
    • 1998,Michel Houellebecq,Les Particules Élémentaires:
      Bruno se rendit compte qu'ilne serait jamais accepté par leshippies[].
      Bruno realised that he'd never be accepted by the hippies.
    • 2012 May 3,Le Monde:
      "Iln'y a pas eu un truc auquel onne s'attendait pas", affirme Stéphane Le Foll.
      "There wasn't anything we weren't expecting," stated Stéphane Le Foll.
  3. Used in a subordinate clause before a subjunctive verb (especially when the main verb expresses doubt or fear), to provide extra overtones of doubt or uncertainty (but not negating its verb); the so-called "pleonastic" or "expletive"ne.
    • 1829,Victor Hugo,Le Derner Jour d'un Condamné, section XXVII:
      Ah! mes cheveux blanchiront avant que ma têtene tombe!
      Oh! My hair will go white before my head falls!
    • 1837,George Sand,Mauprat:
      Oui, mais je crains qu'ellene soit plus malade qu'ellene l'avoue, repartit l'abbé.
      "Yes, but I think she might be more ill than she's letting on," the priest replied.
  4. In comparative clauses usually translated with the positive sense of the subsequent negative
    Apprendre le français est plus facile qu'onne pense.
    Learning French is easier than you (might) think.

Usage notes

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  • Typically,ne follows the subject and is itself followed by the verb and:
    • a negative adverbial (pas(not; don't/doesn't),plus(no more, no longer),jamais(never), (now literary)guère(hardly), or (now obsolete)point(not a bit));
    • a nominal element modified by a negative determiner (aucun ornul, both meaning "no", "not a") — note that these phrases can take on nominal, pronominal or adverbial functions;
    • More mobile are negative pronouns, the most common beingpersonne(nobody) andrien(nothing), which will followne and the verb if they function as the object complement of that verb, but if they are the subject of a given clause, they will usually sit at its head:
    Personne ne s'en souviendra demain.Nobody will remember about it tomorrow.
    Rien ne le dérange.Nothing bothers him.
  • In literary French (i.e., the most formal variety of the written language) certain verbs can be negated withne alone (without another negating element likepas). Nowadays, this list is restricted chiefly to the verbspouvoir,savoir,cesser,oser, anddaigner. Less formal registers still require coordination with another negative element.
  • In colloquial (i.e., spoken) French,ne is often omitted, leaving the other negating element (pas,plus,rien,personne, etc.) to indicate the sentence's negative state on its own (unless more than one of these elements is already present).
    Je veux pas ça.I don't want that.
    Il attend personne.He's not waiting for anyone.
    J'en ai plus besoin.I don't need it anymore.
    On va nulle part.We're not going anywhere.
In some regions,ne has disappeared from spoken language either entirely or nearly so. Even when itis included in spoken form, the weak "e" is often elided, causing the remaining/n/ to assimilate into nearby words. Compare a few possible versions of the above example,Je veux pas ça, more or less rising in levels of formality:
J' veux pas ça./ʒ‿vø pɑ sa/
Je veux pas ça./ʒə vø pɑ sa/
Je n' veux pas ça./ʒə‿n.vø pɑ sa/
Je ne veux pas ça./ʒə nə vø pɑ sa/

See also

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Further reading

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Anagrams

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Gagauz

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Pronunciation

[edit]

Etymology 1

[edit]

Inherited fromOld Anatolian Turkishنَه(), fromProto-Turkic*nē-. CompareTurkishne,Azerbaijani.

Adverb

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ne

  1. why

Pronoun

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ne

  1. (interrogative)what?
    One?
    What is that?
    ne isteersiniz?
    what do you want?
  2. whatever,what
    ne desä yapacam
    I will dowhatever he says
Declension
[edit]
Declension of ne
singular(tekil)plural(çoğul)
nominative(yalın)nenelär
definite accusative(belirtme)neyineleri
dative(yönelme)neyänelerä
locative(bulunma)neydänelerdä
ablative(çıkma)neydännelerdän
genitive(tamlayan)neyinnelerin
Derived terms
[edit]

Etymology 2

[edit]

Inherited fromOld Anatolian Turkishنَه(), fromPersianنه(na).Turkishne,Azerbaijani.

Conjunction

[edit]

ne... ne...

  1. neither...nor...
    ne sendäne dä bendä var
    Neither Inor do you have it.

Further reading

[edit]
  • Kopuşçu M. İ. , Todorova S. A. , Kiräkova T.İ., editors (2019),Gagauzça-rusça sözlük: klaslar 5-12, Komrat: Gagauziya M.V. Maruneviç adına Bilim-Aaraştırma merkezi,→ISBN, page120
  • N. A Baskakov, editor (1972), “ne”, inGagauzsko-Russko-Moldavskij Slovarʹ [Gagauz-Russian-Moldovan Dictionary], Moskva: Izdatelʹstvo Sovetskaja Enciklopedija,→ISBN, pages341-342

German

[edit]

Etymology 1

[edit]

FromMiddle High Germanne,ni(not, if not), fromOld High Germanne,ni(no, not, not at all, by no means), fromProto-West Germanic*ne, fromProto-Germanic*ne(not), fromProto-Indo-European*né(not). Also possibly from a contraction ofnicht, dialectalnet,nit,ni.

Pronunciation

[edit]

Particle

[edit]

ne

  1. (colloquial, regional, Northern Germany, North Rhine-Westphalia)right?; is it?; is it not?;tag question
    Synonyms:gell,oder,wa;see alsoThesaurus:nicht wahr
    Wir müssen da lang,ne?
    We need to go that way,don't we?
    Du hast keine Geschwister,ne?
    You don't have siblings,do you?

Etymology 2

[edit]

Pronunciation

[edit]

Interjection

[edit]

ne

  1. alternative spelling ofnee

Etymology 3

[edit]

Pronunciation

[edit]

Article

[edit]

ne

  1. alternative spelling of'ne

German Low German

[edit]

Article

[edit]

ne f

  1. (Paderbornisch)nominative/accusativefemininesingular ofen:a

Pronoun

[edit]

ne m

  1. (Paderbornisch)weakaccusative ofhei:him

See also

[edit]

Gothic

[edit]

Romanization

[edit]

  1. romanization of𐌽𐌴

Huichol

[edit]

Etymology

[edit]

CompareClassical Nahuatlneh(I).

Pronunciation

[edit]

Pronoun

[edit]

  1. I (first-person singular subject pronoun)

Hungarian

[edit]

Pronunciation

[edit]

Adverb

[edit]

ne

  1. don't,should/shallnot,stop (doing something)
    Ne hallgass rá!Don't listen to him!
    Ne felejtsd el!or (more emphatically) Elne felejtsd!(Mind you)don't forget it!
    Miértne? (= Miértne csináljuk/tegyük?)Whynot? (literally, “Whyshouldn't [we do it]?”)
    Bárne tettem volna!I wish I hadn't done it.
    Ne lopj!Thoushalt not steal.

Usage notes

[edit]

Used before the verb in an imperative clause (or sometimes a conditional clause expressing a wish or desire) to negate that clause;ne is always used instead ofnem in the imperative mood.

Derived terms

[edit]
Compound words
Expressions

Further reading

[edit]
  • ne in Géza Bárczi,László Országh,et al., editors,A magyar nyelv értelmező szótára [The Explanatory Dictionary of the Hungarian Language] (ÉrtSz.), Budapest: Akadémiai Kiadó, 1959–1962.Fifth ed., 1992:→ISBN.

Ido

[edit]

Pronunciation

[edit]

Etymology 1

[edit]

FromEsperantone, fromFrenchne,Russianне(ne).

Adverb

[edit]

ne

  1. not,don’t
Derived terms
[edit]
  • ne-(non-, un-, in-, im-, ir- (etc.))

Etymology 2

[edit]

Fromn +‎-e.

Noun

[edit]

ne (pluralne-i)

  1. The name of theLatin script letterN/n.
See also
[edit]

Ingrian

[edit]

Pronunciation

[edit]

Pronoun

[edit]

ne

  1. alternative form ofneet
    • 1936, L. G. Terehova, V. G. Erdeli, translated by Mihailov and P. I. Maksimov,Geografia: oppikirja iƶoroin alkușkoulun kolmatta klaassaa vart (ensimäine osa) [Geography: textbook for Ingrian elementary school third grade (first part)], Leningrad: Riikin Ucebno-Pedagogiceskoi Izdateljstva, page 6:
      Miltaisee pooleene ollaa opettajast?
      On which side of the teacher arethey?

Determiner

[edit]

ne

  1. alternative form ofneet

References

[edit]
  • Ruben E. Nirvi (1971),Inkeroismurteiden Sanakirja, Helsinki: Suomalais-Ugrilainen Seura, page338

Anagrams

[edit]

Isthmus Zapotec

[edit]

Conjunction

[edit]

ne

  1. and

Istro-Romanian

[edit]

Etymology

[edit]

FromLatinnix,nivem, through Proto-Romanian (compareRomaniannea,Aromanianneao), fromProto-Italic*sniks, fromProto-Indo-European*snígʷʰs(snow), root noun derived from*sneygʷʰ-(to snow).

Noun

[edit]

ne f (definitenevu,genitive/dativelu nevu)

  1. snow

Italian

[edit]

Etymology 1

[edit]

FromLatininde(thence). CompareFrenchen(adverb, pronoun).

Alternative forms

[edit]
  • -ne(enclitic form)

Pronunciation

[edit]
  • IPA(key): °/ne/°
  • IPA(key): (traditional)/ne/°
  • Rhymes:-e
  • Hyphenation:ne
  • In modern usage but not traditional usage, this word actively blockssyntactic gemination of its initial consonant. Henceperòneprendo(I (will) take some) is pronounced/peˈrɔ ne ˈprɛndo/ in modern usage, but/peˈrɔ‿nne ˈprɛndo/ traditionally, sinceperò normally triggers syntactic gemination.

Adverb

[edit]

ne

  1. fromthere
    Si chiuse in casa e nonne uscì per giorni.
    He shut himself in the house, and didn't come out for days.
    (literally, “He locked himself in house, and didn'tfrom there come out for days.”)
Usage notes
[edit]
  • The adverbne replacesdi(from there):
Sono di Genova;ne sono venuto stamattina.
I am from Genova; I camefrom there this morning.

Pronoun

[edit]

ne

  1. fromthis; fromthat; fromthese; fromthose,sometimes not translated in English
    Furono mesi di lavoro sfibrante, mane venne fuori un gran film.
    There were months of exhausting work, but a great movie came outof those.
  2. about this; about that; about these; about those
    Ne abbiamo parlato, ma non sono sicuro che abbia capito.
    We talkedabout that, but I'm not sure he understood.
    Certo che ricordo quell'evento:ne ho perfino scritto in un articolo.
    Of course I remember that event, I even wrote an articleabout that
  3. of this; of that; of these; of those,sometimes not translated in English
    Se è avanzata della torta,ne vorrei una fetta, per favore.
    If there's some cake left, I would like a slice.
    (literally, “If is left some cake,of it I would like a slice.”)
    Avevi promesso di tornare a casa, tene ricordi?
    You promised you'd come back home, do you remember (that)?
    (literally, “You had promised to come back to home, do youof it remember?”)
  4. of them(sometimes not translated in English)
    Nonne ho più.
    I don't have any left.
    (literally, “I don'tof it have any more.”)
  5. for this; of that; of these; of those,sometimes not translated in English
    Ho capito cos'ha fatto, ma nonne ho capito il motivo.
    I understood what he did, but I didn't understand the reasonfor that.
  6. intensive particle, used in forms of certain verbs suffixed with-ne, where it indicates a particular way of carrying out the verb's action
    Spalancò la porta esene andò tutta esultante.
    She slammed the door open, and left all cheerful.
    Sene sta sdraiato per ore a non fare nulla.
    He just stays there lying down for hours, without doing anything.
  7. only used in forms of the verb ofvolerne(to hold a grudge)
    Non tene vorrò.
    I won't hold a grudge against you.
  8. only used in forms of the verb ofandarne(to be at stake)
    Ne va della tua vita.
    Your life is at stake.
Usage notes
[edit]
  • The pronounne stands fordi + [pronoun], and can thus be a translation of “[preposition] + it/them” for any preposition that is translated asdi in Italian.
See also
[edit]
Italian personal pronouns
NumberPersonGenderNominativeReflexiveAccusativeDativeCombinedDisjunctiveLocativePartitive
Singularfirstiomi,m',-mimeme
secondtuti,t',-titete
thirdmluisi2,s',-silo,l',-logli,-gliglie,se2lui,ci,c',
vi,v'(formal)
ne,n'
flei,Lei1la,La1,l',L'1,-la,-La1le3,Le1,-le3,-Le1lei,Lei1,
Pluralfirstnoici,c',-cicenoi
secondvoi,Voi4vi,Vi4,v',V'4,-vi,-Vi4vevoi,Voi4
thirdmloro,Loro1si,s',-sili,Li1,-li,-Li1gli,-gli,loro(formal),
Loro1
glie,seloro,Loro1,ci,c',
vi,v'(formal)
ne,n'
fle,Le1,-le,-Le1
1Third person pronominal forms used as formal terms of address to refer to second person subjects (with the first letter frequently capitalised as a sign of respect, and to distinguish them from third person subjects). Unlike the singular forms, the plural forms are mostly antiquated terms of formal address in the modern language, and second person plural pronouns are almost always used instead.
2Also used as indefinite pronoun meaning “one”, and to form the passive.
3Often replaced bygli,-gli in informal language.
4Formal (capitalisation optional); in many regions, can refer to just one person (compare with Frenchvous).

Etymology 2

[edit]

Pronunciation

[edit]

Contraction

[edit]

ne

  1. apocopic form ofnel
    Massimo Troisi non ha vinto un oscar per la sua interpretazioneneIl postino.
    Massimo Troisi did not win an Oscar for his performanceinIl Postino.
Usage notes
[edit]
  • The contractionne is used wherenel,nella, etc., would ordinarily be used, but cannot be because the article is part of the title of a film, book, etc.
See also
[edit]

Further reading

[edit]
  • ne1 in Treccani.it –Vocabolario Treccani on line, Istituto dell'Enciclopedia Italiana
  • ne2 in Treccani.it –Vocabolario Treccani on line, Istituto dell'Enciclopedia Italiana

Japanese

[edit]

Romanization

[edit]

ne

  1. Thehiragana syllable(ne) or thekatakana syllable(ne) inHepburn romanization.

Kalasha

[edit]

Determiner

[edit]

ne

  1. no

Particle

[edit]

ne

  1. no

Kapampangan

[edit]

Pronunciation

[edit]
  • IPA(key): /ˈne/ [ˈnɛ]
  • Hyphenation:ne

Etymology 1

[edit]

Contraction ofna +ya.

Pronoun

[edit]

ne

  1. blend of 3rd person singular possessive/ergative pronoun + 3rd person singular absolutive pronoun
    Ikitne.
    S/he sawhim/her.

Etymology 2

[edit]

CompareTagalog'no,Japanese(na),(ne).

Particle

[edit]

ne

  1. (informal)sentence-final particle indicatingemotion ormildemphasis
    Nokarin ya kayane?
    Now, I wonder where is s/he?
  2. (tag question)sentence-finalquestion marker particle indicatingemphasis and asking forconfirmation:right?;eh?;isn't it,innit?
    Mako nakune?
    I'm leaving,ok?

Adverb

[edit]

ne

  1. already;now (expresses theevent when following averb)
    Yarine.
    Finishedalready.
  2. already;now (declares theevent ofaction when following averb in thepasttense)
    Mekone.
    s/he leftalready.
  3. already;now (suggestsimmediate orquickaction when following theinfinitive form andfuturetense of theverb)
    Papuntane kanu.
    s/he said that s/he's comingalready.
See also
[edit]

Karaim

[edit]

Etymology

[edit]

FromProto-Turkic*nē-.

Pronoun

[edit]

ne

  1. what

References

[edit]
  • N. A. Baskakov, S.M. Šapšala, editor (1973), “ne”, inKaraimsko-Russko-Polʹskij Slovarʹ [Karaim-Russian-Polish Dictionary], Moscow: Moskva,→ISBN

Karelian

[edit]
Regional variants ofne
North Karelian
(Viena)
ne
South Karelian
(Tver)
ne

Etymology

[edit]

FromProto-Finnic*nek. Cognates includeFinnishne andEstonianneed.

Pronunciation

[edit]
  • IPA(key): /ˈnʲe/
  • Hyphenation:ne

Determiner

[edit]

ne

  1. (South Karelian)those
  2. (North Karelian or dialectal)these,those(medial)

Pronoun

[edit]

ne

  1. (South Karelian)those
  2. (North Karelian or dialectal)these,those(medial)

Usage notes

[edit]
  • In North Karelian,ne is used to refer to objects that are far away from the speaker, but close to the addressee.

Declension

[edit]
Viena Karelian declension of ne (irregular)
singularplural
nominativešene
genitivešenniijen
partitivešitäniitä
illativešiihniih
inessivešiinäniissä
elativešiitäniistä
adessivešilläniillä
ablativešiltäniiltä
translativešiksiniiksi
essivešinäniinä
comitativeniineh
abessivešittäniittä
prolative
instructiveniin
Tver Karelian declension of ne (irregular)
singularplural
nominativešene
genitivešenniijen
partitivešidäniidä
illativešiihniih
inessivešiinäniissä
elativešiitäniistä
adessivešilläniillä
ablativešildäniildä
translativešiksiniiksi
essivešinäniinä
comitativešiinkeniinke
abessivešittäniittä
prolativešiččiniičči
instructiveniin

See also

[edit]
Karelian demonstratives
proximatemedialdistal
singulartämäšetuo
pluralnämänenuo
In South Karelian, the medial determiners are used instead of the distal series.
Dialectally, the determiners are used as in North Karelian, distinguishing all three series.

References

[edit]
  • A. V. Punzhina (1994), “ne”, inСловарь карельского языка (тверские говоры) [Dictionary of the Karelian language (Tver dialects)],→ISBN
  • P. Zaykov; L. Rugoyeva (1999), “ne”, inКарельско-Русский словарь (Северно-Карельские диалекты) [Karelian-Russian dictionary (North Karelian dialects)], Petrozavodsk,→ISBN
  • Pertti Virtaranta; Raija Koponen (2009), “ne”, in Marja Torikka, editor,Karjalan kielen sanakirja[18], Helsinki: Kotus,→ISSN

Ladin

[edit]

Adverb

[edit]

ne

  1. not

Latin

[edit]

Pronunciation

[edit]

Etymology 1

[edit]

FromProto-Italic*nē, either from a lengthened variant ofProto-Indo-European*né(not), or from*méh₁ with replacement of *m- by *n-.[1] The conjunction is abbreviated fromut.[2]

Adverb

[edit]

(notcomparable)[3]

  1. no,not
  2. + subjunctive, introduces a prohibition or negative command:donot,don’t
  3. + future imperative, introduces a prohibition or negative command in general directions serving for all time, as precepts, statutes, and proverbs: do not, don’t
Derived terms
[edit]

Conjunction

[edit]

(+ subjunctive)

  1. that not, in order not to and similar;lest
    Vereor, videātur ōrātiō mea stulta.
    I fearlest my oration seem foolish.
Usage notes
[edit]
  • Not to be confused with the affirmative particlene (see Etymology 2).
  • The adverb, in cases of prohibition, became obsolete in colloquial speech in late antiquity, being displaced bynon, originally a solecism.
Derived terms
[edit]
Related terms
[edit]

Etymology 2

[edit]

    FromProto-Indo-European*né-h₁(that way, so), which consists of*áno-(yonder,pronomial stem, distal) +‎*-h₁(modal and instrumental suffix). Cognate withAncient Greekνή(nḗ,yes, indeed) andProto-Germanic*-nā(emphatic suffix after adverbs) which features inIcelandicsvona(so),hérna(here), andþarna(there).[4] The same pronominal stem is also present in the wordsenim(for; truly),nempe(indeed), andnam(for).

    Interjection

    [edit]

    [5][6]

    1. truly!,indeed!;only joined with personal pronouns and commonly connected with otheraffirmativeparticles
      • 44BCE – 43BCE,Cicero,Philippics:
        At enim te in disciplinam meam tradideras—nam ita dixisti—domum meam ventitaras.Ne tu, si id fecisses, melius famae, melius pudicitiae tuae consuluisses.
        You had however committed yourself to my instruction and frequented my house, or so you claimed. You wouldcertainly have been more mindful of your virtue and reputation if you had!

    References

    [edit]
    1. ^De Vaan, Michiel (2008), “nē”, inEtymological Dictionary of Latin and the other Italic Languages (Leiden Indo-European Etymological Dictionary Series; 7), Leiden, Boston: Brill,→ISBN,pages403-4
    2. ^Ernout, Alfred;Meillet, Antoine (1985), “2° nē”, inDictionnaire étymologique de la langue latine: histoire des mots (in French), 4th edition, with additions and corrections ofJacques André, Paris: Klincksieck, published2001, pages432-3
    3. ^”, inCharlton T. Lewis and Charles Short (1879),A Latin Dictionary, Oxford: Clarendon Press
    4. ^Dunkel, George E. (2014),Lexikon der indogermanischen Partikeln und Pronominalstämme [Lexicon of Indo-European Particles and Pronominal Stems] (in German), volume 2: Lexikon, Heidelberg: Universitätsverlag Winter,→ISBN, pages60, 62
    5. ^”, inCharlton T. Lewis and Charles Short (1879),A Latin Dictionary, Oxford: Clarendon Press
    6. ^Ernout, Alfred;Meillet, Antoine (1985), “”, inDictionnaire étymologique de la langue latine: histoire des mots (in French), 4th edition, with additions and corrections ofJacques André, Paris: Klincksieck, published2001, page434

    Latvian

    [edit]

    Etymology

    [edit]

    FromProto-Balto-Slavic*ne, fromProto-Indo-European*né.

    Pronunciation

    [edit]
    Request for audio pronunciationThis entry needs anaudio pronunciation. If you are a native speaker with a microphone, pleaserecord this word. The recorded pronunciationwill appear here when it's ready.

    Conjunction

    [edit]

    ne

    1. not
      ne tikainot only
      ne visainot quite

    Lithuanian

    [edit]

    Etymology

    [edit]

    FromProto-Balto-Slavic*ne, fromProto-Indo-European*né.

    Pronunciation

    [edit]

    Interjection

    [edit]

    ne

    1. no (used to show disagreement or negation)

    Livonian

    [edit]

    Pronunciation

    [edit]

    Pronoun

    [edit]

    ne

    1. they;nominativeplural oftämā

    Luganda

    [edit]

    Conjunction

    [edit]

    ne

    1. and(only used if the overall statement is grammatically positive)

    See also

    [edit]

    References

    [edit]

    J. D., Chesswas (1967),The Essentials of Luganda, 4th edition, Nairobi: Oxford University Press, page94

    Mandarin

    [edit]

    Pronunciation

    [edit]

    Romanization

    [edit]

    ne (ne5 /ne0,Zhuyin˙ㄋㄜ)

    1. Hanyu Pinyin reading of /
    2. Hanyu Pinyin reading of

    ne

    1. nonstandard spelling of
    2. nonstandard spelling of
    3. nonstandard spelling of
    4. nonstandard spelling ofnê̄

    Usage notes

    [edit]
    • Transcriptions of Mandarin into the Latin script often do not distinguish between the criticaltonal differences employed in the Mandarin language, using words such as this one without indication of tone.

    Mezquital Otomi

    [edit]

    Etymology 1

    [edit]

    FromProto-Otomi[Term?], fromProto-Otomian[Term?], fromProto-Oto-Pamean*neʔ.

    Pronunciation

    [edit]

    Verb

    [edit]

    ne

    1. (transgender)want

    Etymology 2

    [edit]

    FromProto-Otomi*ne, fromProto-Otomian*ne, fromProto-Oto-Pamean*te/*ne, fromProto-Oto-Manguean*(Y)te(H)³.

    Alternative forms

    [edit]

    Pronunciation

    [edit]

    Noun

    [edit]

    ne

    1. mouth
    2. snout
    3. edge(of a blade)
    4. bite,sting
    5. animals at the head of the herd

    References

    [edit]
    • Andrews, Enriqueta (1950),Vocabulario otomí de Tasquillo, Hidalgo[19] (in Spanish), México, D.F.:Instituto Lingüístico de Verano, pages19, 47, 74
    • Hernández Cruz, Luis; Victoria Torquemada, Moisés (2010),Diccionario del hñähñu (otomí) del Valle del Mezquital, estado de Hidalgo (Serie de vocabularios y diccionarios indígenas “Mariano Silva y Aceves”;45)‎[20] (in Spanish), second edition,Instituto Lingüístico de Verano, A.C., page210

    Middle Dutch

    [edit]

    Etymology

    [edit]

    FromOld Dutchne, fromProto-Germanic*ne, fromProto-Indo-European*né.

    Adverb

    [edit]

    ne

    1. not

    Usage notes

    [edit]

    Immediately precedes the verb. Often found in combination with the synonymousniet or another negating adverb, which is placed elsewhere.

    Alternative forms

    [edit]

    Descendants

    [edit]
    • Dutch:n-(prefix)

    Further reading

    [edit]

    Middle English

    [edit]

    Alternative forms

    [edit]

    Etymology

    [edit]

    FromOld Englishne, fromProto-West Germanic*ne, fromProto-Germanic*ne, fromProto-Indo-European*né.

    Pronunciation

    [edit]

    Adverb

    [edit]

    ne

    1. not (negates the accompanying verb)
      Þeine bileveden hire nought.Theydidn't believe her.
    2. not (to no degree, extent, or way)
      Þoune art weyke.You aren't weak.

    Usage notes

    [edit]
    • Middle English lacksdo-support. Instead,ne is simply used by itself:Puple deien, bot famene deieþ ("People die, but reputationdoes not die").
    • Middle English hasnegative concord, so negatives don't cancel out another, unlike formal English or Latin.ne is often accompanied by othernegatives rather than used alone. Double, triple, and quadruple negatives are common:I ne oght no man noght ("I haven't owed anything to anyone," literally "I not owed no one nothing").
    • ne usually immediately precedes the verb; comparenought /nat, which usually follows it.

    Related terms

    [edit]

    Descendants

    [edit]
    • English:ne(obsolete)
    • Scots:ne(obsolete)

    References

    [edit]

    Conjunction

    [edit]

    ne

    1. nor(and not, or (not), not)
    2. lest(in case, before)
    3. than (introducing a basis of comparison)

    Usage notes

    [edit]
    • ne can contract with certain words that follow it, such asne wasnas. This is optional, so forms likene was are possible.
    • ne... ne... is often found in correlative constructions, with the meaning ofnot... or...; this is comparable to modern Englishneither... (n)or....

    Descendants

    [edit]
    • English:ne(obsolete)
    • Scots:ne(obsolete)

    References

    [edit]

    Middle French

    [edit]

    Etymology 1

    [edit]

    Alternative forms

    [edit]

    Adverb

    [edit]

    ne

    1. not (used to negate a verb)
      • 1488, Jean Dupré,Lancelot du Lac, page22:
        Ha ha pourdieu franc chevalier et preuxne me occisez mie
        Ha! For the love of God honest and valiant knight, don't kill me!
      • c. 1532,François Rabelais,PantagruelPrologue de l’Auteur:
        Jene suis nay en telle planette et ne m'advint oncques de mentir, ou asseurer chose quene feust veritable. J'en parle comme un gaillard Onocrotale, voyre, dy je, crotenotaire des martyrs amans, et crocquenotaire de amours : Quod vidimus testamur.
        (pleaseadd an English translation of this quotation)
      • 1562, Henry IV of France,Lettres Missives:
        Catherine de Médicis,ne tarda pas à faire venir auprès de lui, en 1561, sa femme et ses enfants.
        Catherine of Medicis did not hesitate to bring to him, in 1561, his wife and his children
    Usage notes
    [edit]
    • As in modern French, may be used in combination with another adverb, such asne... iamais,ne... pas,ne... gaire,ne... mie,ne... oncques,ne... poin(c)t andne... rien(s), but such an adverb is not required.

    Etymology 2

    [edit]

    Seeny

    Conjunction

    [edit]

    ne

    1. alternative form ofny(neither; nor)

    Mohawk

    [edit]

    Article

    [edit]

    ne

    1. the

    Negerhollands

    [edit]

    Pronunciation

    [edit]

    Verb

    [edit]

    ne

    1. take

    References

    [edit]
    • Language Contact in the Danish West Indies (2012,→ISBN

    Nheengatu

    [edit]

    Etymology

    [edit]

    FromOld Tupine. Cognate withGuaranínde.

    Pronunciation

    [edit]
    Request for audio pronunciationThis entry needs anaudio pronunciation. If you are a native speaker with a microphone, pleaserecord this word. The recorded pronunciationwill appear here when it's ready.
    • Rhymes:-e
    • Hyphenation:ne

    Pronoun

    [edit]

    ne

    1. (second-class) second-person singular personal pronoun (you,your)
      Ne akanhemu reikú nhaãséne kirá reikú.
      You are scared becauseyou are fat.
      Aé uputari upitáne irũmu.
      He wants to stay withyou.
      Ne manha uwiké uka pisasú upé.
      Your mother enters the new house.

    Usage notes

    [edit]
    • As a second-class pronoun,ne is used as the subject of a sentence when its verb is a second-class one (those verbs are sometimes referred to as adjectives). The personal pronounne is also used when governed by any postposition with the exception ofarama andsupé. Finally,ne is used as a possessive pronoun as well.

    See also

    [edit]
    Nheengatu personal pronouns
    singularfirst-class pronounsecond-class pronoun
    first-personixése
    second-personindéne
    third-personi
    pluralfirst-class pronounsecond-class pronoun
    first-personyandéyané
    second-personpenhẽpe
    third-personaintá (or)aintá (or)

    References

    [edit]

    Northern Kurdish

    [edit]

    Etymology

    [edit]

    FromProto-Iranian*na, fromProto-Indo-Iranian*na, fromProto-Indo-European*né. Related tona.

    Adverb

    [edit]

    ne

    1. not
      Ezne kurd im.
      I'mnot Kurdish.

    Interjection

    [edit]

    ne

    1. no

    Northern Ndebele

    [edit]

    Etymology

    [edit]

    FromProto-Bantu*-nàì.

    Adjective

    [edit]

    -ne

    1. four

    Inflection

    [edit]
    Adjective concord, tone L
    modifiercopulative
    1st singularengimunengimune
    2nd singularomuneumune
    1st pluralesibanesibane
    2nd pluralelibanelibane
    class 1omunemune
    class 2abanebane
    class 3omunemune
    class 4eminemine
    class 5elineline
    class 6amanemane
    class 7esinesine
    class 8ezinezine
    class 9eneine
    class 10ezinezine
    class 11olunelune
    class 14obunebune
    class 15okunekune
    class 17okunekune

    Norwegian Nynorsk

    [edit]

    Alternative forms

    [edit]

    Etymology

    [edit]

    FromOld Norsenið f, possibly fromProto-Germanic*nidwō(sinking; downfall).

    Pronunciation

    [edit]

    Noun

    [edit]
    The templateTemplate:nn-noun does not use the parameter(s):
    3=ne4=nea
    Please seeModule:checkparams for help with this warning.

    ne n (pluralneet)

    1. alunar phase of anold moon, i.e. period of time in which themoon iswaning
      Antonym:ny

    Derived terms

    [edit]

    References

    [edit]

    Anagrams

    [edit]

    Old Czech

    [edit]

    Etymology

    [edit]

    Inherited fromProto-Slavic*ne, fromProto-Slavic*ne, fromProto-Balto-Slavic*ne, fromProto-Indo-European*né.

    Pronunciation

    [edit]

    Particle

    [edit]

    ne

    1. Negation particle;no,not

    Descendants

    [edit]

    References

    [edit]

    Old Dutch

    [edit]

    Alternative forms

    [edit]
    • ne-(more common prefix variant)

    Etymology

    [edit]

    FromProto-Germanic*ne(not), fromProto-Indo-European*né(no, not). Cognate withOld Englishne(not),Old Frisianne(not),Old Saxonne(not) andOld High Germanni(not).

    Adverb

    [edit]

    ne

    1. not
      Synonyms:niewiht,ne-
      • c. 900CE, Die altmittel- und altniederfränkischen Psalmen und Glossen[The Old Middle and Old Low Franconian psalms and glosses]:
        Sālig man thēr niweht vuor in gerēde ungenēthero, inde in wege sundigerone stunt, inde in stuole suftene saz.
        Graceful is the man who did not go to the trial of the godless, and didnot stand on the road of sin, and didnot sit in the seat of perdition.

    Descendants

    [edit]
    • Middle Dutch:ne

    Further reading

    [edit]
    • ne”, inOudnederlands Woordenboek,2012

    Old English

    [edit]

    Etymology

    [edit]

    FromProto-Germanic*ne(not).

    Pronunciation

    [edit]

    Adverb

    [edit]

    ne

    1. not
      • 10th century,Exeter Book Riddle 8[21]:
        Iċ… hlūde ċirme, healde mīne wīsan, hlēoþrene mīþe,…
        I… loudly cry out, hold my tone,don't hide a sound,…

    Usage notes

    [edit]
    • Old English does not havedo-support. Instead,ne is simply used by itself:Menn sweltaþ, ac hlīsane swilt ("People die, but reputationdoes not die").
    • Ne is placed immediately before the finite verb (except in poetry, where it may occur in other positions for metrical reasons):Sēo lǣrestre ne meahte furðum mīnes naman ġemunan (“The teacher could not even remember my name”). It only goes before infinitives on the rare occasion when there is no finite verb to negate:Iċ wēne þæt þū sċyle forlǣtan and eft ne cuman ("I think you should leave and not come back"),Uton ne forspillan nāne tīd mā ("Let's not waste any more time").
    • Ne negates verbs. Other parts of speech are negated with:Earg iċ eom, nā lǣwa ("I'm a coward, not a traitor"),Iċ hīe fræġn "Hū wæs þīn færeld?" and hēo cwæþ "Nā yfel" ("I asked her 'How was your trip?' and she said "Not bad'"). is also used when the verb is only implied:Ne rēċe iċ hwæðer mē hwā ġelīefe þē nā ("I don't care if anyone believes me or not"). also negates tō-infinitives and participles:Þās þing ġedafenode tō dōnne and þā ōðru nā tō forlǣtenne ("It would have made sense to do these things and not to neglect the others").
    • Ne and its accompanying verb often come at the beginning of a sentence:Ne meahte nān mann tecnāwan hwelcre mægðe hē wǣre ("Nobody could tell what tribe he was," literally "Couldn't nobody tell what tribe he was").
    • Old English hasnegative concord, meaning one negative does not cancel out another. Double, triple, and quadruple negatives are very common:Ne sċolde iċ nǣfre nānum menn nāwiht ("I've never owed anything to anyone," literally "I never not owed no one nothing").
    • In a few verbs beginning with a vowel, h, or w,ne actually fuses with the verb, creatingnesan(to not be),nabban(to not have),nyllan(to not want),nytan(to not know), andnāgan(to not own). In the West Saxon dialect (the dialect of most surviving texts and sometimes referred to as "standard" Old English), the contracted forms are the norm, while in other dialects the uncontracted formsne wesan,ne habban, etc. are also common.

    Conjunction

    [edit]

    ne

    1. (in negative phrases)or,andnot (optionally translated as "nor")
      Þurh þissa þinga ġehāt sind cumene tō anwealde unmenn. Ac hīe lēogaþ, ne ġelǣstaþ hīe þæt ġehāt,ne hīe nǣfre nyllaþ!
      By the promise of these things, brutes have risen to power. But they lie, they do not fulfill that promise,and they never will!
    2. ne... ne... is used to mean "[not...] or..." (optionally translated as "neither... nor...")
      Iċ næbbene frīendne fīend. Wrace iċ hæbbe.
      I don't have friends or enemies. I have revenge.

    Usage notes

    [edit]
    • In the phrase "[not...] or...",ne is often used consecutively for "or", stacking with thene negating the following verb:Iċ nātne ne rēċe hwelċes cynnes fugol hit sīe, hit is mīn frēond ("I don't knowor care what kind of bird it is, it's my friend").

    Descendants

    [edit]

    Old French

    [edit]

    Etymology 1

    [edit]

    FromLatinnōn.

    Alternative forms

    [edit]
    • nen(poetic, before vowels)

    Adverb

    [edit]

    ne

    1. not; used to form negative constructions
    Descendants
    [edit]

    Etymology 2

    [edit]

    FromLatinnec.

    Conjunction

    [edit]

    ne

    1. neither (not one or the other)
    Descendants
    [edit]

    Old Frisian

    [edit]

    Alternative forms

    [edit]

    Etymology

    [edit]

    FromProto-Germanic*ne(not). Cognates includeOld Englishne andOld Saxonne.

    Pronunciation

    [edit]

    Adverb

    [edit]

    ne

    1. not

    Descendants

    [edit]
    • North Frisian:
      Heligoland:ni

    Conjunction

    [edit]

    ne

    1. nor

    Particle

    [edit]

    ne

    1. no

    Synonyms

    [edit]

    References

    [edit]
    • Bremmer, Rolf H. (2009),An Introduction to Old Frisian: History, Grammar, Reader, Glossary, Amsterdam: John Benjamins Publishing Company,→ISBN

    Old Saxon

    [edit]

    Alternative forms

    [edit]

    Etymology

    [edit]

    FromProto-Germanic*ne.

    Adverb

    [edit]

    ne

    1. not

    Descendants

    [edit]
    • Middle Low German:ne,en

    Old Tupi

    [edit]

    Pronunciation

    [edit]

    Pronoun

    [edit]

    ne

    1. (rare)alternative form ofnde

    Pali

    [edit]

    Alternative forms

    [edit]
    Alternative scripts

    Adjective

    [edit]

    ne

    1. accusativepluralmasculine ofna(those)

    Pronoun

    [edit]

    ne

    1. accusativeplural ofna(them, those)

    Phuthi

    [edit]

    Etymology

    [edit]

    FromProto-Bantu*-nàì.

    Adjective

    [edit]

    -ne

    1. four

    Inflection

    [edit]
    Adjective concord, tone L
    modifiercopulative
    1st singularlegimunegimune
    2nd singularlomuneumune
    1st plurallesibanesibane
    2nd plurallelibanelibane
    class 1lamunemhune
    class 2labanebhane
    class 3lomunemhune
    class 4leminemhine
    class 5lelinelhine
    class 6lamanemhane
    class 7lesinessine
    class 8letinettine
    class 9leneyhine
    class 10letinettine
    class 14lobunebhune
    class 15lokunekkune
    class 17lokunekkune

    Polish

    [edit]

    Pronunciation

    [edit]

    Etymology 1

    [edit]

    Onomatopoeic.

    Interjection

    [edit]

    ne

    1. (Przemyśl)used tocallcows andcalves

    Etymology 2

    [edit]

    Seena.

    Interjection

    [edit]

    ne

    1. (Podegrodzie)alternative form ofna(take it)

    Further reading

    [edit]
    • Aleksander Saloni (1899), “ne”, in “Lud wiejski w okolicy Przeworska”, in M. Arct, E. Lubowski, editors,Wisła : miesięcznik gieograficzno-etnograficzny (in Polish), volume13, Warsaw: Artur Gruszecki, page241
    • Karol Mátyás (1891), “ne”, in “Słowniczek gwary ludu zamieszkującego wschodnio-południową najbliższą okolicę Nowego Sącza”, inSprawozdania Komisyi Językowej Akademii Umiejętności (in Polish), volume 4, Kraków: Drukarnia Uniwersytetu Jagiellońskiego, page325

    Rawang

    [edit]
    Picture dictionary
    ne
    ne
    ne

    Click on labels in the image.


    góng
    góng
    góng

    Noun

    [edit]

    ne

    1. eye.

    Romanian

    [edit]

    Alternative forms

    [edit]
    • нє(pre-1860s Cyrillic form)

    Etymology

    [edit]

    FromVulgar Latinnīs, fromLatinnos. Compare(old form) andAromanian.

    Pronunciation

    [edit]

    Pronoun

    [edit]

    ne (unstressedaccusative andreflexive form ofnoi)

    1. (direct object, first-person plural)us
      Elneurmează.
      He's followingus.

    Related terms

    [edit]
    • noi(stressed accusative)

    Pronoun

    [edit]

    ne (unstresseddative andreflexive form ofnoi)

    1. (indirect object) (to)us
      Elenedaucadouri.
      They giveus presents.

    Related terms

    [edit]

    See also

    [edit]

    Saterland Frisian

    [edit]

    Pronunciation

    [edit]

    Article

    [edit]

    ne

    1. Form of ofn used before feminine adjectives
      Dät is n Gous.Ne grieze Gous.That's a goose.A grey goose.

    Scots

    [edit]

    Etymology

    [edit]

    FromMiddle Englishne, fromOld Englishne, fromProto-Germanic*ne, fromProto-Indo-European*né.

    Pronunciation

    [edit]
    • IPA(key): /neɪ/,/nɛ/,/nə/,/n(ː)/

    Adverb

    [edit]

    ne

    1. (archaic, rare)Not.
      Ne look at the sky, when ye tread bumpy roads.
      (please add an English translation of this usage example)
      (A Northern English folk saying)

    Conjunction

    [edit]

    ne

    1. (archaic, rare)Nor.
      Ne mother,ne father,ne friends,ne foes ne-knew what had worthen of him.
      (please add an English translation of this usage example)

    Usage notes

    [edit]
    • Ne is a negative particle and it is used preverbally, i.e. it is placed directly before a verb, for example,ː"What haps might chance me Ine knew" (William Fowler (makar), 1590) and "To suffer exile he said that hene couth" (Gavin Douglas, Virgil's Aeneid, 1513). Now archaic and chiefly dialectal, it is still understood and used by a few rural speakers in Scotland and Northern England.
    • As a conjunction, it is placed immediately before the word it negates as inːne mickle,ne little;Twasne man,ne woman..ne beast;ne rich,ne poor,ne bold,ne meek,ne stong,ne weak can escape God's wrath.
    • In urban areas and cities became displaced byna ornae.

    Further reading

    [edit]

    Serbo-Croatian

    [edit]

    Etymology

    [edit]

    FromProto-Slavic*ne, fromProto-Balto-Slavic*ne, fromProto-Indo-European*né.

    Pronunciation

    [edit]

    Particle

    [edit]

    ne (Cyrillic spellingне)

    1. not (denoting negation)
      ne znamI don't know
      on je ne samo darovit, već i jako marljivhe is not only talented, but also very industrious
      htio-ne htiowhether you want it or not
      da ne spavaš? / ne spavaš li? / zar ne spavaš?aren't you sleeping?
      ne mogu, a da ne…I cannot but…
      reći neto say no; refuse, decline
      ne manje nego/od…no less than…
      ne doćito fail to come, not come
      … Zar ne?… Aren't you? (Isn't it?, Do you?, Don't you?)
      nećuI won't

    Interjection

    [edit]

    ne (Cyrillic spellingне)

    1. no
      Jesi li demokrat? Ne!Are you a democrat? No!

    Synonyms

    [edit]

    Antonyms

    [edit]

    Skou

    [edit]

    Pronoun

    [edit]

    ne

    1. we
      Ne fu.
      We saw her.

    References

    [edit]
    • Donohue, Mark.A Grammar of the Skou Language of New Guinea (2004).

    Slovak

    [edit]

    Alternative forms

    [edit]

    Pronunciation

    [edit]

    Pronoun

    [edit]

    ne

    1. accusative ofony

    Usage notes

    [edit]

    Used after prepositions.

    Slovene

    [edit]

    Etymology

    [edit]

    FromProto-Slavic*ne, fromProto-Indo-European*né.

    Pronunciation

    [edit]

    Particle

    [edit]

    1. not (negates meaning of verb)
    2. no (expresses disapproval, disagreement)

    Antonyms

    [edit]
    • (antonym(s) ofno):,

    Further reading

    [edit]
    • ne”, inSlovarji Inštituta za slovenski jezik Frana Ramovša ZRC SAZU (in Slovene),2014–2025

    Southern Ndebele

    [edit]

    Etymology

    [edit]

    FromProto-Bantu*-nàì.

    Adjective

    [edit]

    -ne

    1. four

    Inflection

    [edit]

    This adjective needs aninflection-table template.

    Sumerian

    [edit]

    Romanization

    [edit]

    ne

    1. romanization of𒉈

    Swazi

    [edit]

    Etymology

    [edit]

    FromProto-Bantu*-nàì.

    Adjective

    [edit]

    -ne

    1. four

    Inflection

    [edit]
    Adjective concord, tone L
    modifiercopulative
    1st singularlengimunengimune
    2nd singularlomuneumune
    1st plurallesibanesibane
    2nd plurallenibanenibane
    class 1lomunemune
    class 2labanebane
    class 3lomunemune
    class 4leminemine
    class 5lelineline
    class 6lamanemane
    class 7lesinesine
    class 8letinetine
    class 9leneine
    class 10letinetine
    class 11lolunelune
    class 14lobunebune
    class 15lokunekune
    class 17lokunekune

    Tagalog

    [edit]

    Alternative forms

    [edit]

    Etymology

    [edit]

    CompareIlocanone,Kapampanganne, andJapanese(ne).

    Pronunciation

    [edit]

    Particle

    [edit]

    ne (Baybayin spellingᜈᜒ)(Bataan, Nueva Ecija, tag question)

    1. Sentence-finalquestion marker particle indicatingemphasis and asking forconfirmation:right?;eh?;isn't it,innit?
      Synonyms:'no,'di ba,ano
      Tapos magkikita tayo sa bahay ni Aling Neneng,ne?
      Afterwards, we'll see each other at Ms. Neneng's house,am I right?
      Maligo ka na,ne?
      Take a bath,alright?

    See also

    [edit]

    Further reading

    [edit]
    • hane”, inPambansang Diksiyonaryo | Diksiyonaryo.ph, Manila,2018.
    • Serrano Laktaw, Pedro (1914),Diccionario tagálog-hispano (overall work in Tagalog and Spanish), Intramuros, Manila: Ateneo de Manila.,page298
    • The templateTemplate:R:Vocabulario de la lengua tagala 1860 does not use the parameter(s):
      page=136

    text=HANI. pc. Entiendes? Please seeModule:checkparams for help with this warning.Noceda, Fr. Juan José de; Sanlucar, Fr. Pedro de (1860),Vocabulario de la lengua tagala, compuesto por varios religiosos doctos y graves, y coordinado por…, ultimamente aumentado y corregido por varios religiosos de la Orden de Agustinos calzados.[22] (overall work in Spanish and Classical Tagalog), Manila: Ramírez y Giraudier.

    Anagrams

    [edit]

    Ternate

    [edit]

    Pronunciation

    [edit]

    Determiner

    [edit]

    ne

    1. (proximal)this,these
      namonethis chicken

    Pronoun

    [edit]

    ne

    1. (demonstrative)this
      ngori tomauneI wantthis
      ne fokethis is a cockroach

    References

    [edit]
    • Rika Hayami-Allen (2001),A descriptive study of the language of Ternate, the northern Moluccas, Indonesia, University of Pittsburgh

    Turkish

    [edit]

    Pronunciation

    [edit]

    Etymology 1

    [edit]

    FromOttoman Turkishنه(ne,what, whatever, how), fromOld Anatolian Turkish[script needed](ne,what), fromProto-Turkic*nē-(what).[1]

    Cognate withOld Turkic𐰤𐰀(n²a/⁠ne⁠/,what, which),Karakhanidنا(ne),Old Uyghur[script needed](ne),Azerbaijani,Salarneñ,Bashkirни(ni),Chuvashмӗн(mĕn) (metathesis < *ne-me),Kazakhне(ne),Khakasниме(nime),Kyrgyzне(ne),Tatarни(ni),Turkmennǟmä,Tuvanчүү(çüü),Uyghurنېمە(nëme),Uzbeknima.

    Pronoun

    [edit]

    ne

    1. what
      Ne istiyorsun?What do you want?
    2. whatever
      Ne istersen yaparım.I will dowhatever you want.
    3. (colloquial)why
      Senne geldin buraya şimdi?Why did you come here now?
    Usage notes
    [edit]

    Ne meaningwhy is often used to convey hostility, annoyance, disrespect etc.

    Declension
    [edit]
    Declension ofne
    singularplural
    nominativeneneler
    definite accusativeneyineleri
    dativeneyenelere
    locativenedenelerde
    ablativenedennelerden
    genitiveneyinnelerin
    Possessive forms
    nominative
    singularplural
    1st singularneyimnelerim
    2nd singularneyinnelerin
    3rd singularneyineleri
    1st pluralneyimiznelerimiz
    2nd pluralneyinizneleriniz
    3rd pluralnelerineleri
    definite accusative
    singularplural
    1st singularneyiminelerimi
    2nd singularneyininelerini
    3rd singularneyininelerini
    1st pluralneyimizinelerimizi
    2nd pluralneyinizinelerinizi
    3rd pluralnelerininelerini
    dative
    singularplural
    1st singularneyimenelerime
    2nd singularneyinenelerine
    3rd singularneyinenelerine
    1st pluralneyimizenelerimize
    2nd pluralneyinizenelerinize
    3rd pluralnelerinenelerine
    locative
    singularplural
    1st singularneyimdenelerimde
    2nd singularneyindenelerinde
    3rd singularneyindenelerinde
    1st pluralneyimizdenelerimizde
    2nd pluralneyinizdenelerinizde
    3rd pluralnelerindenelerinde
    ablative
    singularplural
    1st singularneyimdennelerimden
    2nd singularneyindennelerinden
    3rd singularneyindennelerinden
    1st pluralneyimizdennelerimizden
    2nd pluralneyinizdennelerinizden
    3rd pluralnelerindennelerinden
    genitive
    singularplural
    1st singularneyiminnelerimin
    2nd singularneyininnelerinin
    3rd singularneyininnelerinin
    1st pluralneyimizinnelerimizin
    2nd pluralneyinizinnelerinizin
    3rd pluralnelerininnelerinin
    Predicative forms
    singularplural
    1st singularneyimnelerim
    2nd singularnesinnelersin
    3rd singularne
    nedir
    neler
    nelerdir
    1st pluralneyizneleriz
    2nd pluralnesiniznelersiniz
    3rd pluralnelernelerdir
    Related terms
    [edit]

    Adverb

    [edit]

    ne

    1. what,how,such
      Ne güzel!How beautiful!
      Ne güzel bir gün!What a beautiful day!
    2. Used as an intensifier to express surprise, astonishment, together with expressions like be!, ha!.
      Ne osurdun be!You farted such (that probably the whole world heard it).

    Etymology 2

    [edit]

    FromOttoman Turkishنه(ne,neither; nor), fromPersianنه(na). Cognate toOld Englishne(not).

    Conjunction

    [edit]

    ne ... ne ...

    1. neither;nor
      Ne bune şuNeither thisnor that
    Usage notes
    [edit]
    • Not used alone but rather as ne...ne..., the way it is used is directly copied from Persian نه...نه...(“neither; nor”).
    Antonyms
    [edit]

    Etymology 3

    [edit]

    Noun

    [edit]

    ne

    1. The name of theLatin-script letterN/n.

    See also

    [edit]

    References

    [edit]
    1. ^Starostin, Sergei;Dybo, Anna;Mudrak, Oleg (2003), “*nē-”, inEtymological dictionary of the Altaic languages (Handbuch der Orientalistik; VIII.8), Leiden, New York, Köln: E.J. Brill

    Tuvaluan

    [edit]

    Particle

    [edit]

    ne

    1. past tense marker, inserted immediately before the relevant verb

    Unami

    [edit]

    Pronunciation

    [edit]

    Pronoun

    [edit]

    1. that(inanimate)

    See also

    [edit]
    Unami demonstrative pronouns
    animateinanimateobviative
    proximal singular (“this”)wa,wàn,wàniyu,yun,yuniyul,yuli
    distal singular (“that”)na,nàn,nàni,nën,nëni
    proximal plural (“these”)yuki,yukyuli,yulnèl
    distal plural (“those”)nèki,nèknèl
    absentative1 distal singularnakanike
    absentative1 distal pluralnèlnikahke
    absentative1 proximal singularwaka

    1 Inaccessible to speaker, deceased

    Ura (Vanuatu)

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    Pronunciation

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    Noun

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    ne

    1. water
    2. river

    Further reading

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    • Terry Crowley,Ura: A Disappearing Language of Southern Vanuatu (1999)

    Votic

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    Pronunciation

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    Pronoun

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    ne

    1. alternative form ofneed

    References

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    • Hallap, V.; Adler, E.; Grünberg, S.; Leppik, M. (2012), “ne”, inVadja keele sõnaraamat [A dictionary of the Votic language], 2nd edition, Tallinn

    Welsh

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    Pronunciation

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    Noun

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    ne

    1. nasal mutation ofde

    Mutation

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    Mutated forms ofde
    radicalsoftnasalaspirate
    deddeneunchanged

    Note: Certain mutated forms of some words can never occur in standard Welsh.
    All possible mutated forms are displayed for convenience.

    West Makian

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    Etymology

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    Likely cognate withTernatene(this).

    Pronunciation

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    Determiner

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    ne

    1. (proximal)this,these
      Synonyms:mene,nema
      Antonym:ma
      palane ilamothis house is large
      nudupe de ngeunethrow awaythese leftovers

    References

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    • Clemens Voorhoeve (1982),The Makian languages and their neighbours[24], Pacific linguistics

    Xhosa

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    Etymology

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    FromProto-Bantu*-nàì.

    Adjective

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    -ne

    1. four

    Inflection

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    Adjective concord, tone L
    modifiercopulative
    positivenegativepositivenegative
    1st singularendimneendingemnendimneandimne
    2nd singularomneongemneumneawumne
    1st pluralesibaneesingebanesibaneasibane
    2nd pluralenibaneeningebanenibaneanibane
    class 1omneongemnemneakamne
    class 2abaneabangebanebaneababane
    class 3omneongemnemneawumne
    class 4emineengeminemineayimine
    class 5elineelingelinelinealiline
    class 6amaneangemanemaneawamane
    class 7esineesingesinesineasisine
    class 8ezineezingezinezineazizine
    class 9eneengeneineayiyine
    class 10ezineezingezinezineazizine
    class 11oluneolungelunelunealulune
    class 14obuneobungebunebuneabubune
    class 15okuneokungekunekuneakukune
    class 17okuneokungekunekuneakukune

    Yup'ik

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    Noun

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    ne (absolutiveena)

    1. house

    Zou

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    Pronunciation

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    Noun

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    ne

    1. lip

    Verb

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    ne

    1. (transitive) toeat

    Derived terms

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    References

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    • Lukram Himmat Singh (2013),A Descriptive Grammar of Zou, Canchipur: Manipur University, pages40-41

    Zulu

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    Etymology

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    FromProto-Bantu*-nàì.

    Adjective

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    -ne

    1. four

    Inflection

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    Adjective concord, tone L
    modifiercopulative
    positivenegativepositivenegative
    1st singularengimuneengingemunengimuneangimune
    2nd singularomuneongemuneumuneawumune
    1st pluralesibaneesingebanesibaneasibane
    2nd pluralenibaneeningebanenibaneanibane
    class 1omuneongemunemuneakamune
    class 2abaneabangebanebaneababane
    class 3omuneongemunemuneawumune
    class 4emineengeminemineayimine
    class 5elineelingelinelinealiline
    class 6amaneangemanemaneawamane
    class 7esineesingesinesineasisine
    class 8ezineezingezinezineazizine
    class 9eneengene,engeyineine,yineayiyine
    class 10ezineezingezinezineazizine
    class 11oluneolungelunelunealulune
    class 14obuneobungebunebuneabubune
    class 15okuneokungekunekuneakukune
    class 17okuneokungekunekuneakukune

    Derived terms

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    References

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