sagan

See also: Sagan and saĝan

English

Noun

sagan (plural sagans)

  1. Alternative letter-case form of Sagan
    • 1984 September 27, Jerry Boyajian, “re: Moriarty's long-awaited reviews”, in net.comics, Usenet:
      Part of it was that I just couldn't deal with a piece of primal matter floating around for sagans of years, eroding away until it became a nice, shiny, sharp-as-William-F.-Buckley's-tongue sword, with the old familiar "S" symbol coincidentally engraved on its hilt.
    • 1989, Edward S. Hudson, Alien Death Fleet, Pageant Books (1989), →ISBN, page 5:
      "There must be a sagan of them up there."
    • 1998, Jon Luini & Allen Whitman, "Finding Your Geek", EQ, January 1998, page 132:
      There are sagans of other planets crying out for this knowledge.
    • 2001 October 24, Joe \"Nuke Me Xemu\" Foster, “Re: Randomly write data to a file”, in comp.lang.basic.visual.misc, Usenet:
      The Jet and xBase database engines have been pounded on by who knows how many developers and end-users for years, which amounts to sagans and sagans of hours of real-world testing!

Anagrams


Icelandic

Noun

sagan f

  1. definite nominative singular of saga

Old Norse

Noun

sagan

  1. nominative singular definite of saga

Polish

sagan

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /ˈsa.ɡan/

Noun

sagan m inan

  1. (obsolete) A large copper or iron vessel used to boil water or food.
  2. (colloquial, anatomy) A head.
  3. (Kraków) A kettle.

Declension

Further reading

  • sagan in Polish dictionaries at PWN

Swedish

Noun

sagan

  1. definite singular of saga
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