dinc

See also: dinç, Dinç, and DINC

Azerbaijani

Etymology

Derived from Proto-Turkic *dï̄n +‎ -(n)c. Azerbaijani tıncıxmaq (to pant) and dincəlmək are derivations of the same root. Cognate with Turkish dinç, Bashkir тыныс (tınıs), see there for more.

Pronunciation

  • Audio:(file)

Adjective

dinc (comparative daha dinc, superlative ən dinc)

  1. quiet
    Synonyms: səssiz, sakit
    Antonym: səs-küylü
  2. silent
    Synonyms: səssiz, sakit, dinməz
  3. calm
    Synonyms: sakit, rahat
    Antonyms: rahatsız, aramsız, narahat, nadinc
  4. peaceful
    Synonyms: sakit, sülhsevər
  5. civilian (unrelated to armies or ground forces) (mostly with sakin (resident))
    Dinc sakinlər müharibə vaxtı kəndi tərk etdilər.
    Civilians left the village during the war.

Descendants

  • Armenian: դինջ (dinǰ)

Bouyei

Etymology

Cognate with Zhuang dinj.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /tin˥˧/

Adjective

dinc

  1. short

Middle Dutch

Etymology

From Old Dutch thinc

Noun

dinc n or f

  1. case, subject, what has been discussed
  2. case (of law)
  3. matter, affair, question, what one is involved in
  4. thing, object

Inflection

Strong neuter noun
singular plural
nominative dinc dinc, dinge
accusative dinc dinc, dinge
genitive dincs dinge
dative dinge dingen
Strong feminine noun
singular plural
nominative dinc dinge
accusative dinc dinge
genitive dinc, dinge dinge
dative dinc, dinge dingen


Derived terms

Descendants

Further reading

  • dinc”, in Vroegmiddelnederlands Woordenboek, 2000
  • Verwijs, E., Verdam, J. (1885–1929) “dinc”, in Middelnederlandsch Woordenboek, The Hague: Martinus Nijhoff, →ISBN

Old High German

Noun

dinc

  1. manuscript spelling of ding