Clipping ofEnglish Han gaza .
han
( international standards ) ISO 639-3 language code forHangaza . FromMiddle English han , contraction ofhaven .
han
( obsolete ) plural simplepresent ofhave 1614 ,William Browne ,The Shepheards Pipe :Since that yehan had my virginitie,
1976 , “Howfen Wakes” (track 1), inHowfen Wakes [1] , performed by The Houghton Weavers:Ee lads 'an ya fowt? Nay, we'n not fowt yet.
FromKorean 한(恨) ( han ) , fromMiddle Chinese 恨 (MC honH ).
han (uncountable )
Sorrowful resentment , as a part of theKorean cultural identity.sorrowful resentment as a part of the Korean cultural identity
han m (plural hane , definite hani , definite plural hanet )
khan ( archaic ) roadside shelter fortravellers and theiranimals :roadside hostelry ,caravanserai ,inn ( derogatory ) fleabag hotel messy place with nocontrol of who comes and who leaves,regular flophouse IPA (key ) : ( Navarro-Lapurdian ) /han/ [hãn] IPA (key ) : ( Southern ) /an/ [ãn] Rhymes:-an Hyphenation:han han (not comparable )
there ( away from the speaker and the listener ) “han ”, inEuskaltzaindiaren Hiztegia [Dictionary of the Basque Academy ] (in Basque),Euskaltzaindia [Royal Academy of the Basque Language ] “han ”, inOrotariko Euskal Hiztegia [General Basque Dictionary ],Euskaltzaindia ,1987–2005 han
third-person plural present indicative ofhaver FromMiddle High German hān , fromOld High German havēn , northern variant ofhabēn , fromProto-West Germanic *habbjan .
han (irregular ,third-person singular present hat ,past tense hauw ,past participle jehad ,past subjunctive häu )
( Ripuarian and Kölsch , auxiliary , with a past participle) tohave (forms theperfect andpast perfect tense )( same dialects, transitive ) tohave ; toown ( to possess, have ownership of; to possess a certain characteristic ) ( same dialects, transitive ) tohave ; tohold ( to contain within itself/oneself ) Uurhat doa Floep va. You are afraid of that. (literally, “Youhave fear of that. ”) ( same dialects, transitive ) tohave ,get ( to obtain, acquire ) ( same dialects, transitive ) toget ( to receive ) ( same dialects, transitive ) tohave ( to be afflicted with, suffer from ) ( same dialects, transitive , of units of measure ) tocontain , becomposed of,equal Ing Menuuthat 60 Sekonde. There are 60 seconds in one minute. (literally, “One minutehas 60 seconds. ”) ( same dialects, impersonal , withhet or't ) there be ,there is ,there are ( same dialects, with't andmit ) to beoccupied with, tolike , to be intoIechhan' t nit zoeë mit Höng. I'm not a great fan of dogs. (literally, “I don'thave it that much with dogs. ”) ( same dialects, with't anduvver ) totalk aboutVierhauwe' t juus uvver dienge Vrunk. We were just talking about your friend. (literally, “We justhad it about your friend. ”) conjugation of
han in
Kirchröadsj infinitive han present participle — past participle jehad gerund — auxiliary han singular plural 1st person iech 2nd person doe 3rd person heë/zie/het 1st person vier/vuur 2nd person ier/uur 3rd person zie indicative present simple han has hat hant hat hauwt hant preterite hauw hauwts hauw hauwe häut hait hauwe present perfect han jehad has jehad hat jehad hant jehad hat jehad hauwt jehad hant jehad past perfect hauw jehad hauwts jehad hauw jehad hauwe jehad häut jehad hait jehad hauwe jehad future simple weëd han weëds han weëd han weëde han weëd han weëde han future perfect weëd jehad han weëds jehad han weëd jehad han weëde jehad han weëd jehad han weëde jehad han conditional simple häu hai häuts haits häu hai häue haie — häue haie present jeuf han jeufs han jeuf han jeuve han jeuft han jeuve han perfect häu jehad hai jehad häuts jehad haits jehad häu jehad hai jehad häue jehad haie jehad — häue jehad haie jehad imperative affirmative – han — — hat —
Hunsrik:hon Kölsch:han Luxembourgish:hunn “han” ind'r nuie Kirchröadsjer Dieksiejoneer 2nd ed., 2017. han f
genitive plural ofhana FromOld Norse hann (dativehánum ).
han (genitive hans ,accusative ham )
he han c (singular definite hannen ,plural indefinite hanner )
male ,he han
third-person plural present indicative ofhaber han
( archaic or dialectal ) alternative form ofhaben 1812 ,Brothers Grimm , “Kinder- und Haus-Märchen”, inDer gescheidte Hans , page138 :Hansens Mutter spricht: „wohin Hans?“ Hans antwortet: „zur Grethel.“ – „Machs gut Hans“ – „Schon gut machen, Adies, Mutter“ – Hans kommt zur Grethel: „guten Tag Grethel.“ – „Guten Hans: was bringst du Gutes?“ – „Bring nichts, gegebenhan .“ (pleaseadd an English translation of this quotation) FromEnglish hand .
han
hand De Nyew Testament [2] , Wycliffe Bible Translators, Inc.,2025 hàn
song Synonym: òhàn Cognate withTlingit héen ( “ water, river ” ) .
han
river han
apocopic form ofhanno ( “ they have ” ) han
Rōmaji transcription ofはん han (singular )
( transitive ) todo ; tomake ( auxiliary ) forms verbs from nounsIPA (key ) : /ˈhan/ [ˈhʌn] Rhymes:-an Syllabification:han han
pronunciation variant ofsan Dialectal synonyms & variants of san
Southern / Central Mt. Province Tadian san ,(Lubon ) han ,(Banaao ,Cadad-anan ,Cagubatan ,Dacudac ,Lenga ,Pandayan ) han Bauko san ,(Banao ,Bila ,Otucan ) han Sabangan san ,(Tambingan ,Supang ,Data ,Lagan ,Losad ,Poblacion ) san ,(Bun-ayan ,Pingad ,Bao-angan ,Camatagan ,Napua ,Gayang ,Capinitan ,Busa ,Namatec ) han
han
duck han
nonstandard spelling ofhān nonstandard spelling ofhán nonstandard spelling ofhǎn nonstandard spelling ofhàn 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.Contracted infinitive and plural present ofhaven .
han
( transitive ) alternative form ofhaven -Piers Plowman IPA (key ) : ( before 13th CE ) /ˈhaːn/ Inherited fromOld High German habēn , fromProto-West Germanic *habbjan .
hān (irregular ,third-person singular present hāt ,past tense habete ,past participle gehabet ,auxiliary hān )
tohave Composed forms of
hān (
irregular , auxiliary
hān )
Alemannic German:haa ,ha ,heen ,hoh ,hä ,häbä ,hè Swabian:hau Bavarian:hoom ,hobm ,hobn ,hom ,ho ,hob Cimbrian:haban ,hen ,håm Mòcheno:hom Northern Bavarian:[hɔm] Central Franconian:han ,hann ( most dialects ) East Central German:Erzgebirgisch:hamm Upper Saxon German:ham ,hom Vilamovian:hon East Franconian: German:haben Berlinerisch:ham Ruhrpöttisch:habn Rhine Franconian:hann ,hawwe ( Vorderpfälzisch ) ,hunn ( northern Palatine ) Frankfurterisch:[havə] ;[hɑvə] ,[hɔvə] ( older ) Palatine German:hann ,hawwe ,hunn Pennsylvania German:hawwe Upper Hessian:hu ,hunn Yiddish:האָבן ( hobn ) hān
alternative form ofhāhen Benecke, Georg Friedrich; Müller, Wilhelm; Zarncke, Friedrich (1863 ), “han ”, inMittelhochdeutsches Wörterbuch: mit Benutzung des Nachlasses von Benecke , Stuttgart: S. Hirzel han
Directional verbal particle; may indicate movementupwards ortowards the speaker han
two FromOld Norse hampr .
han m (plural hans )
( Jersey ) galangal FromProto-Germanic *hanjō .
han f (plural hanen )
( Föhr-Amrum ) hen ,chicken Coordinate term: höön ( “ rooster ” ) han
this Synonym: ev Chyet, Michael L. (2003 ), “han ”, inKurdish–English Dictionary [3] , with selected etymologies by Martin Schwartz, New Haven and London: Yale University Press,page231 FromOld Norse hann .
han
he ,him “han” inThe Bokmål Dictionary .FromOld Norse hann .
han
he ,him ,it (third person singular, masculine)Han is used to refer not only to masculine persons, but any masculine noun. E.g.:Bilen er fin. Eg likarhan . - The car is nice. I likeit .
In some dialects,han may precede a male given name or a difinite singular masculine noun. E.g:Kor vart det tåhan Erik? ( “ Where did Erik disappeared? ” )
Norwegian Nynorsk personal pronouns first person second person reflexive third person masculine feminine neuter singular nominative eg ,je 1 du — han ho det ,dat 2 accusative meg deg seg han ,honom 2 ho ,henne 2 det ,dat 2 dative 2 meg deg seg honom henne di 2 genitive min din sin hans hennar ,hennes 1 dess 3 plural nominative me ,vi de ,dokker — dei accusative oss ,okk dykk ,dokker seg dei ,deim 2 dative oss ,okk dykk ,dokker seg deim 2 genitive vår ,okkar dykkar ,dokkar sin deira ,deires 1
1 Obsolete.2 Landsmål.3 Rare or literary. Italic forms unofficial today.
“han” inThe Nynorsk Dictionary .FromOld Norse hann .
han
he /it (masculine nominative pronoun )FromProto-West Germanic *hą̄han .
hān
( intransitive ) tohang ( transitive ) tohang “hān ”, inOudnederlands Woordenboek ,2012 hān f
a projectingstone that forms part of aboundary Strongō -stem:
FromOld Norse hann .
han
he han ær mīn vin ―he is my friend Old Swedish personal pronouns first person second person reflexive third person masculine feminine neuter singular nominative iak ,iæk þū — han hōn þæt accusative mik ,mek þik sik han hana ,hōna þæt dative mǣ(r) ,mik þǣ(r) ,þik sǣ(r) ,sik hōnum ,hānum hænni þȳ ,þī genitive mīn þīn sīn hans hænna(r) þæs dual nominative vit it — — — — accusative oker *iker sik — — — dative oker *iker sǣr ,sik — — — genitive okar *ikar sīn — — — plural nominative vī(r) ī(r) — þē(r) þā(r) þø̄n ,þē(n) accusative os ,ōs iþer sik þā þā(r) þø̄n ,þē(n) dative os ,ōs iþer sǣr ,sik þēm ,þø̄m ,þom þēm ,þø̄m ,þom þēm ,þø̄m ,þom genitive vār iþar sīn þēra þēra þēra
han (invariable )
Han Chinese ( referring to the largest ethnic group indigenous to China ) han m (plural han or hans )
Han Chinese ( member of the largest ethnic group indigenous to China ) han
ear Borrowed fromOttoman Turkish خان ( han ) , fromPersian خان ( xân ,“ caravanserai ” ) , fromProto-Indo-European *h₂wes- ( “ to dwell ” ) .
han n (plural hanuri )
inn ,caravanserai Inherited fromNorwegian Nynorsk han ( “ he ” ) .
Unknown. Possible examples:
IPA (key ) : /han/ ,/haɲ/ ( Norwegian accent ) IPA (key ) : /xan/ ,/xanʲ/ ( Russian accent ) There is no evidence of palatalization of the /n/-sound, although it should be there at least in the Northern Norwegian pronunciation.
There is also no known examples of the Russian pronunciation, where the letterh may be pronounced as /g/ (seegaf andgall ).
han
he Ingvild Broch; Ernst H. Jahr (1984 ),Russenorsk: Et pidginspråk i Norge [Russenorsk: A pidgin language in Norway ], 2 edition, Oslo: Novus Forlag, pages113, 119 Samoan Plantation Pidgin [ edit ] FromEnglish hand .
han
arm hand Only used to refer to a human; for an animal, the equivalent parts are all labelled aslek .
Mosel, Ulrike (1980 ),Tolai and Tok Pisin: the influence of the substratum on the development of New Guinea Pidgin (Pacific Linguistics; Series B, no. 73)[4] , Canberra: Australian National University,→ISBN Peter, Mühlhäusler (1983 ), “Samoan Plantation Pidgin English and the origin of New Guinea Pidgin”, in Ellen Woolford and William Washabaugh, editors,The Social Context of Creolization , Ann Arbor: Karoma, pages28-76 FromOttoman Turkish خان ( han ) , fromPersian خان ( xân ,“ caravanserai ” ) .
hȃn m inan (Cyrillic spelling ха̑н )
inn IPA (key ) : /ˈan/ [ˈãn] Rhymes:-an Syllabification:han han
third-person plural present indicative ofhaber FromOld Swedish han , fromOld Norse hann , fromProto-Norse *hānaʀ .
han (genitive hans )
he , the third person singular, masculine, nominative case.Han är mycket stiligHe is very handsome( now nonstandard in writing, common in speech ) him Synonym: ( standard ) honom Jag såghan / Jag såg'an I sawhim See the usage notes forhonom .
Swedish personal pronouns Number Person nominative oblique possessive common neuter plural singular first — jag mig ,mej 3 min mitt mina second — du dig ,dej 3 din ditt dina third masculine (person)han honom ,han 2 ,en 5 hans feminine (person)hon henne ,na 5 hennes gender-neutral (person)1 hen hen ,henom 7 hens common (noun)den den dess neuter (noun)det det dess indefinite man or en 4 en ens reflexive — sig ,sej 3 sin sitt sina plural first — vi oss vår ,våran 2 vårt ,vårat 2 våra second — ni er er ,eran 2 ,ers 6 ert ,erat 2 era archaic I eder eder ,eders 6 edert edra third — de ,dom 3 dem ,dom 3 deras reflexive — sig ,sej 3 sin sitt sina
1 Neologism. Usage has increased since 2010, though it remains limited.
2 Informal
4 Dialectal, also used lately as an alternative toman , to avoid association to the male gender.
5 Informal, somewhat dialectal
6 Formal address
FromProto-Malayo-Polynesian *kaən , compareMalay makan .
han
toeat FromEnglish hand .
han
hand arm foreleg (of an animal)wing (of a bird)branch (of a tree)branch (figurative)Mosel, Ulrike (1980 ),Tolai and Tok Pisin: the influence of the substratum on the development of New Guinea Pidgin (Pacific Linguistics; Series B, no. 73)[5] , Canberra: Australian National University,→ISBN Peter, Mühlhäusler (1983 ), “Samoan Plantation Pidgin English and the origin of New Guinea Pidgin”, in Ellen Woolford and William Washabaugh, editors,The Social Context of Creolization , Ann Arbor: Karoma, pages28-76 FromOttoman Turkish خان ( han ) , fromOld Anatolian Turkish خان ( ḫān ) , fromProto-Turkic *kagan .Doublet ofkağan andhakan .
han (definite accusative hanı ,plural hanlar )
khan a honorific title used after the names of some male rulers FromOttoman Turkish خان ( han ) , fromPersian خان ( xân ,“ caravanserai ” ) .
han (definite accusative hanı ,plural hanlar )
caravanserai ,inn “han ”, inTurkish dictionaries , Türk Dil Kurumu Ayverdi, İlhan (2010 ), “han ”, inMisalli Büyük Türkçe Sözlük , a reviewed and expanded single-volume edition, Istanbul: Kubbealtı NeşriyatıNişanyan, Sevan (2002– ), “han ”, inNişanyan Sözlük han (definite accusative hany ,plural hanlar )
khan “han ” inEnedilim.com “han ” inWebonary.org (Thisetymology is missing or incomplete. Please add to it, or discuss it at theEtymology scriptorium .)
(classifier cây ) han • (𧄊 )
Dendrocnide Synonym: mán (Thisetymology is missing or incomplete. Please add to it, or discuss it at theEtymology scriptorium .)
han • (𨫪 )
appeared tobegin torust chiếc nồi đồnghan xanh rusty green bronze pot FromProto-Vietic *haːɲ ( “ to ask ” ) .
han • (𪡗 ,𠻃 ,㗍 ,漢 ,嘆 ,罕 )
( archaic ) toask Synonym: hỏi Compare withIfè ŋà ,Olukumi ghàn ,Itsekiri ghàn and possiblyIgala ñà , fromProto-Yoruba *ɣɪ̃ã̀ ,*ŋɪ̃ã̀ , fromProto-Edekiri *ɣɪ̃ã̀ ,*ŋɪ̃ã̀ , ultimately fromProto-Yoruboid *ŋɪ̃ã̀ .
hàn
toappear ,show ; to bevisible hàn
toscribble hàn
( Igbomina ) topluck leaves from aplant Synonym: já Compare withIfè ŋɔ́ ,Olukumi ghọn ,Igala ñwọ̀ , proposed to be derived fromProto-Yoruba *ɣɔ̃̀ ,*ŋɔ̃̀ , fromProto-Edekiri *ɣɔ̃̀ ,*ŋɔ̃̀ , ultimately fromProto-Yoruboid *ŋʷɔ̃̀ ,Proto-Yoruboid *wɔ̃̀ . SeeProto-Bantu *gon ,Igbo gwọ ,Urhobo ahọnre
hàn
tosnore Synonym: han-an-run han
toscream loudly Synonym: ké hán
( Igbomina ) alternative form ofwọ́n ( “ tocatch something in the air ” )