bambin
French
Etymology
Borrowed from Italian bambino, from onomatopoeic bambo for the first stammerings of children.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /bɑ̃.bɛ̃/
Audio: (file)
Noun
bambin m (plural bambins, feminine bambine)
- toddler (young human child)
Further reading
- “bambin”, in Trésor de la langue française informatisé [Digitized Treasury of the French Language], 2012.
Maltese
Etymology
From Italian bambino (“child, baby”). Compare Italian Bambino Gesù (also Bambin Gesù).
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /bamˈbiːn/
Noun
bambin m (plural bambini)
- baby, toddler; almost exclusively used referring to Baby Jesus and therefore often capitalized as il-Bambin (Ġesù)
- 2021, “Doqqu, qniepen, doqqu”[1]performed by Family Affair:
- Sena wara l-oħra jasal il-Milied. / Il-Bambin jitwieled, l-ogħla fost l-ulied.
- Year after year, Christmas time comes. / The Holy Child is born, the highest among children.
- 1949, Anton Buttigieg, “Żmien ir-Rebbiegħa”, in Fanali bil-Lejl:
- u qalb il-pal tal-bajtar
il-flieles żgħar minn bejn ir-rix tal-qroqqa
joħorġu jnaqqru l-brajma tal-ġulġliena;
u ġol-benniena
fid-dar ta’ ħdejn il-lewża
fil-ħeġġa tal-ħommejr
jitwieled bambin żgħir- (please add an English translation of this quotation)