menino
See also: meniño
Italian
Verb
menino
- inflection of menare:
- third-person plural present subjunctive
- third-person plural imperative
Anagrams
Portuguese
Alternative forms
Etymology
Inherited from Old Galician-Portuguese meninho (the palatal nasal survives in the Galician cognate meniño), of uncertain origin:
- From Latin minimus.
- From a Gallo-Romance language (cf. Catalan minyó (“boy”), French mignon (“cute”)).
- From meu ninno, with ninno being a borrowing from Old Spanish niño. The alveolar nasal may have arisen due to conflation with Old Galician-Portuguese neno, from Vulgar Latin *ninnus.
- From Paleo-Hispanic, perhaps from Proto-Indo-European *mey- (“small”) (compare Middle Irish menn (“kid”), Middle Breton menn (“young goat”), Middle Welsh myn (“kid”), from Proto-Celtic *menno-).[1]
Pronunciation
- (Brazil) IPA(key): /miˈnĩ.nu/, /meˈnĩ.nu/
- (Southern Brazil) IPA(key): /meˈni.no/
- (Portugal) IPA(key): /mɨˈni.nu/
- Rhymes: -inu, (Brazil) -ĩnu
- Hyphenation: me‧ni‧no
Noun
menino m (plural meninos, feminine menina, feminine plural meninas)
Synonyms
- garoto, rapaz, moço, miúdo (Portugal), guri (chiefly dialectal in South Brazil), piá (dialectal in Paraná, Brazil), catraio (colloquial)
Derived terms
Related terms
Descendants
References
- ^ Matasović, Ranko (2009) Etymological Dictionary of Proto-Celtic (Leiden Indo-European Etymological Dictionary Series; 9), Leiden: Brill, →ISBN, page 266
Spanish
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /meˈnino/ [meˈni.no]
- Rhymes: -ino
- Syllabification: me‧ni‧no
Noun
menino m (plural meninos, feminine menina, feminine plural meninas)
Further reading
- “menino”, in Diccionario de la lengua española [Dictionary of the Spanish Language] (in Spanish), online version 23.8, Royal Spanish Academy [Spanish: Real Academia Española], 10 December 2024