User:KYPark/ㄴ

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a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z
                    
na
"I"
nagada
"to go out"
nagwi
"ass, donkey"
nag
ME. nagge, Dut. negge
naoda
"to come out"
natanada
"to appear"
nanjaeng-i
"dwarf"
nano
from Lat. nanus, Fre. nain "dwarf"
nal
  1. "day"
  2. "daytime, daylight"
  3. "(sunny) weather"
nal
"blade"
nam
"other people"
najda
"to be low"
nether
as of "Netherlands, nether world," etc., meaning "lower"
nahda
"to give birth"
natal
from Lat. nasci, akin to native, nature, etc.
neo
"you"
neoguri
"raccoon dog"
raccoon
"araiguma" in Japanese, lit. "wash-bear"
neoul
  1. roll of waves, waving of large wings, etc.
  2. veil of women
neol
  1. "panel, plank"
  2. "seesaw plank"
  3. "coffin, casket"
neomda
"to surpass, exceed, go beyond"
nol
"redness in the sky" before sunrise and after sunset
nopda
"to be high, lofty"
nohda
"to lay"
nuna
"older sister" (to younger brothers)
  • 누님 (nunim) "older sister" (to younger brothers)
  • 언니 (eonni) "older sister" (to younger sisters)
  • 누이 (nui) "sister, younger sister"
nun
  • "sister" (Note: This sense is nowhere in the following.)
  • ``From Late Latin nonna (nun, tutor), originally (along with masculine form nonnus, denoting a man) a term of address for elderly persons, perhaps from children's speech, reminiscent of nana, like papa etc.`` -- nun#Etymology 1
  • ``O.E. nunne, from L.L. nonna "nun, tutor," originally (along with masc. nonnus) a term of address to elderly persons, perhaps from children's speech, reminiscent of nana (cf. Skt. nona, Pers. nana "mother," Gk. nanna "aunt," Serbo-Cr. nena "mother," It. nonna, Welsh nain "grandmother;" see nanny). Nunnery, c.1275, originally meant "nunhood." Sense of "house of ill-fame" is first recorded 1593.`` -- etymonline.com
nun
(short vowel) "eye"
nun
(long vowel) "snow"
nubda
"to lie down (precisely, on the back)"
nubile
from Lat. nubere "(for women) to marry," akin to nuptial, etc., perhaps originally meaning "(for women in normal copulation) to lie on the back like a succubus, while for men to lie down like an incubus."
nymph
from Latin nympha from Anc. Greek νύμφη (nymphe) "bride, veiled, (pl) labia minora" probably akin to Latin nubere "(for women) to marry, veil, conceal, cover," nubes "cloud," nimbus "cloud, halo," etc.
neukdae
"wolf"
wolf
akin to Anc. Greek λύκος (lykos), Lat. lupus, lupa "she-wolf, prostitute," lupanar "brothel," Fre. louve "she-wolf, prostitute," louvre "wolf hunting," etc.
neulda
"to increase"
neulgda
"to get old"
neunggeum
"crab apple"
neutda
"to be late"
late
neup
"marsh, swamp"
nida
"to go"
nib
  1. (obsolete) "mouth, lips"
  2. (obsolete) "leaf"
    "A cupid motif" marked by curving?
lip
akin to labia majora and labia minora from Lat. labium "lip"
See also
nip
(obsolete) "leaf"

Reference

[edit]
  1. ^ "닝금ㅅ 금: 俗呼沙果 (訓蒙上11)" -- 南廣祐, 敎學 古語辭典, 敎學社, 서울, 2003, p. 341. See also: 사과 (sagwa, "apple").