See also: mae, Mae, MAE, Maè, mãe, Māe, , ma'e, мае, має, and Appendix:Variations of "ma"

Chipaya

Noun

  1. mother

References

Finnish

Etymology

Dialectal variant of minä that has developed through contraction; see it and its etymon, Proto-Finnic *minä, for more.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /ˈmæ/, [ˈmæ]
  • Rhymes:
  • Syllabification(key):
  • Hyphenation(key):

Pronoun

(colloquial)

  1. (personal) I (first person singular personal pronoun)

Declension

  • Irregular: the comitative, instructive and abessive cases, in practice highly rare for personal pronouns anyway, are not used.
  • In addition to the standard set of cases, as well as minä and other personal pronouns have a specific accusative form, mut.

Synonyms

  • minä (standard Finnish; see it for a full list)

Further reading

Anagrams

Luxembourgish

Alternative forms

Etymology

From French mais (but), from Old French mais, from Latin magis. Perhaps merged with a descendant of Middle High German niwære (but, only). Rests of such forms (mär, mar, mor) are attested in several dialects not far to the east and north of Luxembourg. It is plausible that this inherited word, which may already have become dated, was absorbed by the French borrowing. Compare Dutch maar and Luxembourgish nëmmen.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /mæ/, [mɛː]

Conjunction

  1. but

Synonyms

Swedish

Alternative forms

  • mäh
  • Any number of ä letters can be added to show the length of the bleat.

Etymology

Imitative.

Interjection

  1. maa (bleating of a sheep or goat)
    Synonym:

See also

References

Waigali

Etymology

From Common Nuristani *māi, probably an early borrowing of Middle Chinese (mejX). Compare Ashkun , Tregami myä, Kamkata-viri mo.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /ˈmæ/

Noun

(Nisheigram)[1]

  1. crushed millet

References

  1. ^ Strand, Richard F. (2016) “mä”, in Nûristânî Etymological Lexicon[1]