Zirkon

German

Etymology

This, as in the same decade Zirkonium, has been formed artificially by Abraham Gottlob Werner in the 1780s from Arabic زَرْقُون (zarqūn) and then this mineral and metal name spread from German into all European languages and the world.

Pronunciation

  • Audio:(file)
  • IPA(key): /t͡sɪrˈkoːn/
  • Rhymes: -oːn

Noun

Zirkon m (strong, genitive Zirkons, plural Zirkone)

  1. zircon

Declension

Descendants

  • Belarusian: цырко́н (cyrkón)
  • Bulgarian: циркон (cirkon)
  • Catalan: zircó
  • Czech: zirkon
  • Danish: zirkon
  • English: zircon
  • Estonian: tsirkoon
  • French: zircon
  • Finnish: zirkoni
  • Hungarian: cirkon
  • Italian: zircone
  • Japanese: ジルコン (jirukon)
  • Lithuanian: cirkonas
  • Macedonian: циркон (cirkon)
  • Polish: cyrkon
  • Portuguese: zircão
  • Romanian: zircon
  • Russian: цирко́н (cirkón)
  • Serbo-Croatian:
    Cyrillic script: цѝрко̄н
    Latin script: cìrkōn
  • Slovak: zirkón
  • Slovene: cirkon
  • Spanish: circón
  • Swedish: zirkon
  • Tagalog: sirkon
  • Ukrainian: цирко́н (cyrkón)

Further reading

  • Zirkon” in Digitales Wörterbuch der deutschen Sprache
  • Zirkon” in Duden online