siin
Alemannic German
/siːn/
determiner
Definitions
- his; her, hers
Etymology
Inherited from Middle High German sein inherited from Old High German sīn (be, his) inherited from Proto-Germanic *sīnaz (their own, his, its, hers, her own, his own, his hers its their own, its own).
Origin
Proto-Germanic
*sīnaz
Gloss
their own, his, its, hers, her own, his own, his hers its their own, its own
Concept
Semantic Field
Possession
Ontological Category
Other
Emoji
Timeline
Distribution of cognates by language
Geogrpahic distribution of cognates
Cognates and derived terms
- Bewusstsein German
- Eingeschlossensein-Syndrom German
- Gefangensein-Syndrom German
- Nichtsein German
- Unwohlsein German
- sein German
- seinige German
- aanzijn Dutch, Flemish
- bewustzijn Dutch, Flemish
- daarzijn Dutch, Flemish
- voorzijn Dutch, Flemish
- welzijn Dutch, Flemish
- zijn Dutch, Flemish
- *seyno- Proto-Indo-European
- *séynos Proto-Indo-European
- *sīnaz Proto-Germanic
- *wesaną Proto-Germanic
- sinn Old Norse
- sínn Old Norse
- sinn Icelandic
- sijn Middle Dutch
- sīn Old High German
- wërdan Old High German
- se Afrikaans
- sein Middle High German
- sinn Luxembourgish, Letzeburgesch
- 𐍃𐌴𐌹𐌽𐍃 Gothic
- זײַן Yiddish
- *sīn gmw-pro
- *wesan gmw-pro
- sīn Old Dutch
- sain Cimbrian
- soi Cimbrian
- soin Cimbrian
- zain Cimbrian
- zèinan Cimbrian
- sii Alemannic German
- sinh Alemannic German
- ŝchi Alemannic German
- syn Western Frisian
- sīn Old Frisian
- sai' Mòcheno
- senn Central Franconian
- sein Hunsrik
- sin Hunsrik