Sunn
Bavarian
Noun
Sunn f
- alternative spelling of Sun
- 1935 (copyright), Josef Weinheber, Wien wörtlich, 2nd edition, Wien/Leipzig, Impression im März, page 15:
- Wårme Sunn, dås erste Pråterveigerl:
Ållweil wieder gfreust di wiara Kind.- Warm sun, the first violet:
You always rejoice like a child again.
- Warm sun, the first violet:
References
- Maria Hornung, Sigmar Grüner (2002) “Sunn”, in Wörterbuch der Wiener Mundart, 2nd edition, ÖBV & HPT
East Central German
Alternative forms
Etymology
From Middle High German sunne, from Old High German sunna, from Proto-West Germanic *sunnā, from Proto-Germanic *sunnǭ. Compare German Sonne.
Noun
Sunn f
Further reading
- Manfred Blechschmidt, Behüt eich fei dos Licht Ein Weihnachtsbuch des Erzgebirges P. 118
Hunsrik
Alternative forms
Etymology
Inherited from Central Franconian Sonn, from Middle High German sunne, from Old High German sunna, from Proto-West Germanic *sunnā, from Proto-Germanic *sunnǭ, from *sunnô, from Proto-Indo-European *sóh₂wl̥.[1]
Cognate with German Sonne and Luxembourgish Sonn.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /ˈsun/
- Rhymes: -un
- Syllabification: Sunn
Noun
Sunn f (plural Sunne, diminutive Sunnche)
- Sun (the star around which the Earth revolves)
- Sie esse Bëgamott in de Sunn.
- They eat mandarin oranges in the sun.
- sun (a star, especially when seen as the centre of any single solar system)
Related terms
- Sunneblumm
- Sunnehitz
- Sunnelicht
- sunnich
- Sunntach
- sunntachs
References
- ^ Piter Kehoma Boll (2021) “Sunn”, in Dicionário Hunsriqueano Riograndense–Português (in Portuguese), 3rd edition, Ivoti: Riograndenser Hunsrickisch, page 161, column 2
Pennsylvania German
Etymology
From Middle High German sunne, from Old High German sunna, from Proto-West Germanic *sunnā, from Proto-Germanic *sunnǭ, from Proto-Indo-European *sh̥₂uén-, oblique stem of *sóh₂wl̥. Compare German Sonne, Dutch zon, English sun.
Noun
Sunn f (plural Sunne)
- the sun