enke
See also: Enke
Creek
Pronunciation
Noun
enke
- his/her hand
Inflection
Possessive inflection of enke (inalienable)
| Singular | Plural | |
|---|---|---|
| First person | cvnke | ponke |
| Second person | cenke | |
| Third person | enke | |
| Indefinite | estenke | |
References
- J. B. Martin, M. McKane Mauldrin (2004) A dictionary of Creek/Muscogee, University of Nebraska Press, →ISBN, page 28
- J. B. Martin (2011) A grammar of Creek (Muscogee), University of Nebraska Press, →ISBN, page 134
Danish
Etymology
From Old Danish ænkia (“widow”), from Old Norse (east) *enkja, (west) ekkja, from Proto-Germanic *ainakjǭ, cognate with Swedish änka.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /ɛnkə/, [ˈɛŋɡ̊ə]
Noun
enke c (singular definite enken, plural indefinite enker)
Declension
| common gender |
singular | plural | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| indefinite | definite | indefinite | definite | |
| nominative | enke | enken | enker | enkerne |
| genitive | enkes | enkens | enkers | enkernes |
Middle English
Noun
enke
- alternative form of ynke
Norwegian Bokmål
Etymology
From Old Danish ænkia (“widow”), Old East Norse variant of Old Norse ekkja, from Proto-Germanic *ainakjǭ.
Noun
enke f or m (definite singular enka or enken, indefinite plural enker, definite plural enkene)
- a widow (woman whose husband has died)
- (printing) A single line of type that ends a paragraph, carried over to the next page or column; a widow
Antonyms
References
- “enke” in The Bokmål Dictionary.
Norwegian Nynorsk
Alternative forms
- enkje
- Enkja (Ivar Aaasen)
- ekkje, ekkja (Sognamål, Valdresmål, Telemål)
Etymology
From Old Norse ekkja (“widow”), via Danish enke.
Noun
enke f (definite singular enka, indefinite plural enker, definite plural enkene)
- widow (a woman whose husband has died)
- (printing) A single line of type that ends a paragraph, carried over to the next page or column; a widow
Antonyms
References
Old French
Noun
enke oblique singular, m (oblique plural enkes, nominative singular enkes, nominative plural enke)
- alternative form of enque