ewa
'Are'are
Adjective
ewa
Verb
ewa
- be tall
References
- Kateřina Naitoro, A Sketch Grammar of 'Are'are: The Sound System and Morpho-Syntax (2013)
Dutch
Etymology
Borrowed from the conversation-starting Moroccan Arabic اوا.
Pronunciation
Audio: (file)
Interjection
ewa
- (slang) an informal greeting, similar to yo
- 2025 March 13, Majda Ouhajji, “Taalwetenschapper Khalid Mourigh over het veranderende Nederlands: ‘Mattie, fittie en doekoe bijvoorbeeld. Die staan zelfs in de Van Dale’ [Linguist Khalid Mourigh on changing Dutch: ‘Mattie, fittie, and doekoe, for example. These words are even included in the Van Dale dictionary’]”, in NRC Handelsblad[1], retrieved 26 March 2025:
- Ik zat een tijd geleden in de metro in Amsterdam en hoorde ineens ‘ewa sahbi, ara die garo’ (‘hé, vriend, geef me die sigaret’). Bijna helemaal in het Marokkaans-Arabisch. En ik draai me om en ik zie allemaal witte jongens.
- I was on the Amsterdam underground some time ago and suddenly I heard “ewa sahbi, ara die garo” (“Hey, friend, give me that cigarette”). Almost entirely in Moroccan Arabic. And I turn around and all I see are white boys.
Javanese
Romanization
ewa
- romanization of ꦲꦺꦮ
Ngazidja Comorian
Interjection
ewa
References
- “ewa” in Outils & Ressources pour l'Exploitation de la Langue Comorienne, 2008.
Nupe
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /ē.wā/
Noun
ewa (plural ewazhì)
Old Dutch
Etymology
From Proto-West Germanic *aiw, from Proto-Germanic *aiwaz, related to Old High German ēwa and Old Saxon ēo.
Noun
ēwa f
Declension
Declension of ēwa (feminine ō/ōn-stem noun)
Derived terms
Descendants
References
Old High German
Alternative forms
Etymology
From Proto-West Germanic *aiw, from Proto-Germanic *aiwaz, akin to Old English ǣ.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /ˈeː.wa/
Noun
ēwa f
Derived terms
Descendants
References
- Henry Frowde, An Old High German Primer