îns

See also: ins, Ins, INS, ins., in's, Ins., -iņš, and Appendix:Variations of "ins"

Romanian

Etymology

From Vulgar Latin *ipsus or Latin ipsum, masculine accusative of ipse, with a nasal infix from Latin (compare attested inpsuius). Compare Italian esso, Aromanian nãs.

Pronoun

îns m or n (feminine singular însă, masculine plural înși, feminine and neuter plural înse)

  1. (archaic) he, it

Usage notes

No longer used today in its original form, in which it was a pronoun that could serve as an adjective, though has preserved its meaning articulated in compounds like printr-însul (with printru). Now it is found mostly in derivatives of the older form, such as ins (person, individual), dânsul, and together with forms of personal pronouns, such as in însuși (himself, itself).

Synonyms

Derived terms

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