-ij
Dutch (Brabantic)
/ɛi̯/
suffix
Etymology
Inherited from Middle Dutch -ie derived from Old French -ie derived from Latin -ia (-ness) derived from Ancient Greek -ια.
Origin
Ancient Greek
-ια
Gloss
Timeline
Distribution of cognates by language
Geogrpahic distribution of cognates
Cognates and derived terms
- -ia English
- -y English
- acey-deucey English
- scaredy cat English
- toasty English
- -ia Latin
- insolentia Latin
- -ei German
- Duselei German
- Frömmelei German
- Gefühlsduselei German
- Vielgötterei German
- witzig German
- -ie Dutch, Flemish
- -ie French
- Magnol French
- -ия Russian
- -ia Spanish, Castilian
- -ία Ancient Greek
- -ίᾱ Ancient Greek
- -ια Ancient Greek
- -κια Ancient Greek
- βάσις Ancient Greek
- οὐ Ancient Greek
- *-i-h₂, *-h₂ Proto-Indo-European
- -ie Middle English
- -y Middle English
- -ie Old French
- -ejo Esperanto
- -io Esperanto
- -ija Serbo-Croatian
- -ie Middle Dutch
- -ia Translingual
- -ija Latvian
- -ie Middle High German
- -īe Middle High German
- -ija Slovene
- -ija Lithuanian