sinjaur
Dalmatian
noun
Definitions
- sir
Etymology
Inherited from Latin senior (older, elder).
Origin
Latin
senior
Gloss
older, elder
Timeline
Distribution of cognates by language
Geogrpahic distribution of cognates
Cognates and derived terms
- senhor English
- senior English
- señor English
- *seior Latin
- *senior Latin
- consenior Latin
- senior Latin
- senioritas Latin
- seniōrem Latin
- Senior German
- nossignore Italian
- signoraggio Italian
- signore Italian
- signoreggiare Italian
- signorile Italian
- signornò Italian
- signorotto Italian
- sissignore Italian
- sinjoor Dutch, Flemish
- coseigneur French
- seigneur French
- seigneuresse French
- seigneurie French
- senior French
- sieur French
- сеньор Russian
- enseñorearse Spanish, Castilian
- senior Spanish, Castilian
- señor Spanish, Castilian
- señorear Spanish, Castilian
- señorial Spanish, Castilian
- señorito Spanish, Castilian
- señoría Spanish, Castilian
- señorón Spanish, Castilian
- sénior Spanish, Castilian
- assenhorear Portuguese
- senhor Portuguese
- senhoria Portuguese
- senhorio Portuguese
- senhorzinho Portuguese
- sénior Portuguese
- senior Polish
- seignor Old French
- sire Old French
- sinjoro Esperanto
- senyor Cebuano
- sinyo Indonesian
- sinioro Ido
- seigneur Middle French
- sennor Old Portuguese
- sinjur Maltese
- signôr Friulian
- segnor Old Occitan
- senher Old Occitan
- sennor Old Spanish
- sior Venetian
- shon Papiamentu
- sinar Dalmatian
- sinaur Dalmatian
- sinhór Kabuverdianu
- senior Interlingua
- nhum Macanese