angan

See also: ångan and aŋan

Aromanian

Alternative forms

  • anganu, ngan, nganu, ngãnescu, nginescu

Etymology

From Vulgar Latin or Late Latin ingannō (I trick, deceive, mock, ridicule) (attested in a gloss), from Latin *ganno or ganniō. Compare Romanian îngâna, îngân (imitate, mimic, parody; delude oneself, mix up). The semantics of this verb have shifted far from the original meaning in Latin, and also further than in Daco-Romanian, where the primary sense is to imitate or mimic; presumably from Proto-Romanian, the it shifted to the specific sense of calling an animal within Aromanian.

Verb

angan (past participle angãnatã)

  1. I call (an animal).
  • angãnari / angãnare
  • angãnat

Verb


Icelandic

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /ˈauŋkan/

Noun

angan f (genitive singular anganar, no plural)

  1. pleasant scent, aroma

Declension

Synonyms

  • anga (to smell pleasant)
  • angandi (pleasant-smelling)

Middle Low German

Etymology

From an- + gan.

Pronunciation

  • (originally) IPA(key): /anɣɒːn/

Verb

angân

  1. to approach


Old Norse

Etymology

From anga (to emit odour or fragrance) + -an.

Noun

angan f (genitive anganar, plural anganir)

  1. sweet odour
    angan Friggjar
    the love of Frigg

Declension

References

  • angan in Geir T. Zoëga (1910) A Concise Dictionary of Old Icelandic, Oxford: Clarendon Press
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