Clipping ofEnglish Eng lish .
eng
( international standards ) ISO 639-2 &ISO 639-3 language code forEnglish . Probably fromDutch eng ( “ narrow ” ) , also compareOld English enge ( “ narrow ” ) , fromProto-West Germanic *angī , ultimately fromProto-Germanic *anguz .
No mention of the word is found in any surviving Middle English text, save for the Middle English compound wordang-nail . Related toDutch eng ( “ narrow ” ) ,German eng ( “ narrow ” ) ,Low German enj ( “ confined, narrow ” ) ,Luxembourgish enk ( “ narrow ” ) .
eng
( regional , obsolete ) Narrow .The hole was tooeng for him to get through.
Probably created by analogy with other names for nasal consonantsem (m ) anden (n ).
eng (plural engs )
The name of theLatin script letterŊ /ŋ , formed by combining the lettersn andg , used in theIPA ,Sami ,Mende , and some Australian aboriginal languages. The velar nasal consonant found in such words assong orwin k .Synonyms: agma ,engma Neg ,-gen ,neg ,GEN ,/neg ,gen ,gen. ,neg. ,NGE ,/gen ,Gen ,NEG ,Gen. FromProto-Albanian *anga , related toLithuanian angùs ( “ sluggish, lazy, idle ” ) ,éngti ( “ to strangle ” ) ,Latvian îgt ( “ to wear off, to languish ” ) , andGothic 𐌰𐌲𐌲𐍅𐌿𐍃 ( aggwus ,“ narrow ” ) .[ 1]
eng (feminine enge )
deaf and dumb ^ Oryol, Vladimir E. (2000 ),A concise historical grammar of the Albanian language: reconstruction of Proto-Albanian [1] , Leiden, Boston, Köln: Brill,→ISBN , page88 FromOld Danish æng , fromOld Norse eng , fromProto-Germanic *angijō f , fromProto-Indo-European *h₂énkos . CompareGerman Anger ,Latin ancrae ,Ancient Greek ἄγκος ( ánkos ) andSanskrit अङ्कस् ( aṅkas ) .
eng c (singular definite engen ,plural indefinite enge )
Ameadow . FromMiddle Dutch enge , fromOld Dutch *engi , fromProto-West Germanic *angī , fromProto-Germanic *anguz , fromProto-Indo-European *h₂énǵʰus . Cognate withGerman eng , fromOld High German engi .
eng (comparative enger ,superlative engst )
scary ,creepy narrow small FromMiddle Dutch enc .
eng m (plural engen ,nodiminutive )
alternative form ofenk FromMiddle High German enge , fromOld High German engi , fromProto-West Germanic *angī .
eng (strong nominative masculine singular enger ,comparative enger ,superlative am engsten )
narrow ,tight enge Hosen ―tight trousers( of relationships ) close enge Freunde ―close friends“eng ” inDigitales Wörterbuch der deutschen Sprache “eng ” in Uni Leipzig:Wortschatz-Lexikon “eng ” inDuden online IPA (key ) : /ˈʔəŋ/ [ˈʔɨŋ] Rhymes:-əŋ Syllabification:eng ëng (plural ëëng )
nose ( Bauko , Kapangan ) human nose Dialectal synonyms & variants of eng (nose )
Southern / Central Benguet Mankayan eng Bakun eng ,ing Kapangan eng (human)songsong (animal)Kibungan eng ,ing Buguias eleng Mt. Province Tadian eng ,(Banaao ,Cadad-anan ,Cagubatan ,Dacudac ,Lenga ,Pandayan ) ong Bauko eng (human)tupek ,songod (animal)Northern / Applai Mt. Province Besao eng Sagada eng
Morice Vanoverbergh (1982 ), “Kankanay Anatomy: A Lexicon”, inAsian Folklore Studies [2] , volume41 , number 1 (overall work in English and Kankanaey), Nanzan University,→DOI , page84 FromProto-Oceanic *aŋin , fromProto-Malayo-Polynesian *haŋin . CompareTagalog hangin ,Malagasy anina ,Pohnpeian ahng ,Fijian cagi ,Tongan angi ,Samoan agi ,Hawaiian ani .
eng
wind eng f
Feminine singular indefinite article:a ,an Si huet zwéin Hënn aneng Kaz. She has two dogs anda cat. Plural indefinite article:some ;only used inwéi eng ( “ what kind of ” ) ,sou eng ( “ such, this kind of ” ) , and to indicate a vague number before numerals and certain adjectives likeettlech Si hueteng fofzéng Kazen. She hassome fifteen cats. Plural forms indicate a vague number (before numerals and certain adjectives).
eng
nonstandard spelling ofēng nonstandard spelling oféng nonstandard spelling ofěng nonstandard spelling ofèng 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.eng
what ?Eng ngei duh ?What do you want?FromProto-Kuki-Chin *ʔeŋ .
eng
yellow FromProto-Oceanic *aŋin ( “ wind ” ) , fromProto-Austronesian *haŋin ( “ wind ” )
eng
wind FromOld Norse eng .
eng f or m (definite singular enga or engen ,indefinite plural enger ,definite plural engene )
ameadow “eng” inThe Bokmål Dictionary .FromOld Norse eng , fromProto-Germanic *angijō .
eng f (definite singular enga ,indefinite plural enger ,definite plural engene )
ameadow Historical inflection ofeng singular plural indefinite definite indefinite definite Aasen1 Eng Engi Engjar Engjarna 1901 engjarne (engjane )1917 enga,engi engjar [enger]engjane [engene]1938 enga [engi ] enger engene 2012 (current) eng enga enger engene
Forms initalics are currently considered non-standard. Forms in [brackets] were official, but considered second-tier. Forms in (parentheses) were allowed underMidlandsnormalen . 1 Nouns were capitalised for most of the 19th century. “eng” inThe Nynorsk Dictionary .ēng
alternative form ofēnich Bremmer, Rolf H. (2009 ),An Introduction to Old Frisian: History, Grammar, Reader, Glossary , Amsterdam: John Benjamins Publishing Company,→ISBN FromProto-Germanic *angijō f .
eng f or n
meadow Zoëga, Geir T. (1910 ), “eng1 ”, inA Concise Dictionary of Old Icelandic , Oxford: Clarendon Press ; also available at theInternet Archive Zoëga, Geir T. (1910 ), “eng2 ”, inA Concise Dictionary of Old Icelandic , Oxford: Clarendon Press ; also available at theInternet Archive eng c
archaic spelling ofäng ( “ meadow ” ) Cognate withOld Turkic 𐰭 ( ŋ /eŋ/ ) ,Kazakh ең ( eñ ) ,Azerbaijani ən ,Kyrgyz эң ( eŋ ) ,Turkish en , andTurkmen iň .
IPA (key ) : /eŋ/ ,[eŋ˖(ɡ˖)] Hyphenation:eng eng
themost ..., the ...-est (marks the superlative degree of adjectives )eng soʻnggi yangiliklarthe latest news ( Northern Vietnam, South Vietnam ) anh FromProto-Vietic *ʔɛːŋ .
eng
( North Central Vietnam ) elder brother Antonyms: tam ,ún eng ả tam ―brothers and sisters eng f (plural engiau )
The name of theLatin script letterNg /ng . ( Latin-script letter names ) llythyren ;a ,bi ,ec ,èch ,di ,èdd ,e ,èf ,èff ,èg ,eng ,aetsh ,i /i dot ,je ,ce ,el ,èll ,em ,en ,o ,pi ,ffi ,ciw ,er ,rhi ,ès ,ti ,èth ,u /u bedol /u gwpan ,fi ,w ,ecs ,y ,sèd Note: Certain mutated forms of some words can never occur in standard Welsh. All possible mutated forms are displayed for convenience.