[koˈloɾ]
1. masculine noun Colour.
Etymology: From Latin color.
[koˈloɾ]
1. masculine noun Colour.
Etymology: From Latin color.
[nou̯]
1. adjective New.
Etymology: From Latin novus.
2. numeral Nine.
Etymology: From Latin novem.
3. preposition-article contraction, masculine singular In the.
Spelling: Before words beginning with a vowel or h-, it turns into noul’, with word ligature (both words are written together without intermediate spaces). For masculine plural: nous; for feminine forms, see na (1).
4. possessive determiner, masculine singular Our.
Spelling: Before words beginning with a vowel or h-, it turns into noul’, with word ligature (both words are written together without intermediate spaces). For masculine plural: nous; for feminine forms, see na (2).
Etymology: From Latin nos (we), by analogy with tuus (your).
5. possessive pronoun, masculine singular Ours.
Spelling: Before words beginning with a vowel or h-, it turns into noul’, with word ligature (both words are written together without intermediate spaces). For masculine plural: nous; for feminine forms, see na (3).
Etymology: The same as 4.
[nou̯ ˈpaɾe]
1. masculine noun Lord’s Prayer, Our Father.
[ou̯]
1. definite article determiner, masculine singular The.
2. personal pronoun, masculine singular Him, it (for accusative or direct object).
Spelling (1-2): Before words beginning with a vowel or h-, it turns into oul’, with word ligature (both words are written together without intermediate spaces). For masculine plural: ous; for feminine forms, see a (2).
Etymology (1-2): From Latin ille, via Spanish el and Portuguese and Galician o.
3. masculine noun Egg.
Etymology (3): From Latin ovum.
[ai̯ŋgeˈlja]
1. masculine noun Aingeljã or Angelian conlang, name of the first conlang invented by Ángel Serrano, literally “Ángel’s language”.
Etymology: From Ángel, the first name of the creator of this conlang, plus the derivative suffix -jã.