English
Pronunciation
AHD|dÄn, IPA|/dɪn/, SAMPA|/dIn/
audio|en-us-din.ogg|Audio (US)
:Rhymes:English:-ɪn|Rhymes: -ɪn
Etymology 1
Old English dyne, from Germanic *duniz.
Noun
en-noun
- A loud noise; a cacophony or loud commotion.
Translations
rfc-level|Translations at L3+ (AutoFormat? would have corrected level of Translations)
Italian: clamore m
mid
Telugu: ��ల (gOla), ��డవ (goDava)
Etymology 2
Old English dynnan, from Germanic *dunjan, from the same stem as Etymology 1, above.
Verb
en-verb|din|n|ed
- obsolete To be filled with sound; to resound.
- transitive To assail with loud noise.
- transitive To repeat continuously, as though to the point of deafening or exhausting somebody.
#:*2003: His mother had dinned The Whole Duty of Man into him in early childhood � Roy Porter, Flesh in the Age of Reason (Penguin 2004, p. 183)
- intransitive To make a din.
Danish
Etymology
Old Norse þÃnn
Pronoun
din
- your (speaking to one person)
Category:Danish pronouns
Indonesian
Etymology
From Arab.|id ARchar|د��.
Noun
din
- religion
Category:Indonesian nouns
Kiput
Etymology
From Proto-North Sarawak *daqan, from Proto-Malayo-Polynesian *daqan.
Noun
din
- branch
Category:Kiput nouns
Malay
Noun
din
- faith, religion
Maltese
Etymology
From Arabic
Pronoun
din
- this
Category:Maltese pronouns
Old High German
Etymology
Common Germanic *thinaz, whence also Old English þīn, Old Norse þÃnn
Pronoun
dīn
- your (singular)
Category:Old High German pronouns
Romanian
Preposition
ro-prep|a
- on, on top of
- from, out of
Swedish
Pronunciation
audio|Sv-din.ogg|audio
Pronoun
din c (ditt n, dina p)
- your, yours; of one thing in the common gender (speaking to one person)
See also
er#Swedish|er
Turkish
Etymology
From Arabic
Noun
din
- religion
Category:Turkish nouns
Volapük
Etymology
German Ding
Noun
din
- thing
Category:Volapük language
br:din
da:din
fa:din
fr:din
io:din
it:din
ku:din
hu:din
pl:din
ru:din
fi:din
sv:din
te:din
vi:din
tr:din
vo:din
zh:din
|