onyoun
Franco-Provençal
Noun
onyoun (Valaisan)
References
- oignon in DicoFranPro: Dictionnaire Français/Francoprovençal – on dicofranpro.llm.umontreal.ca
Middle English
Alternative forms
- onyon, oynioun, oynon, oynoun, uniown, unon, unyon
- oynnun, oynoin, ungeon (Early Middle English)
- eyngnon, honȝon, onȝone, oyenoun, oygnon, oyneȝoun, oyneon, oyneoun, oynyon, oynyn, unnan (Late Middle English)
Etymology
Borrowed from Old French oignon, from Latin ūniōnem (“onion”); the variation in pronunciation reflects differing adaptations of Old French /uˈɲun/. Compare unioun.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /unˈ(j)uːn/, /ˈun(j)un/, /ui̯nˈ(j)uːn/, /ˈui̯n(j)un/
Noun
onyoun (plural onyouns)
Descendants
- English: onion
- Scots: ingan, ingin
- → Cornish: onyon
- →? Welsh: wynwyn
- →? Middle Irish: uinniún
- Scottish Gaelic: uinnean
References
- “oinyon, n.”, in MED Online, Ann Arbor, Mich.: University of Michigan, 2007.