plen

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Czech

Pronunciation

Etymology 1

Panslavic, from Proto-Slavic *pelnъ,[1] ultimately from Proto-Indo-European *pel- (to earn, to sell).[2]

Noun

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  1. plundering, looting (act of stealing or confiscating assets by an army from unarmed enemy citizens in time of war)
  2. loot, plunder, booty (assets taken by an army from unarmed enemy citizens in time of war)
Declension

Template:cs-decl-noun

Synonyms
  1. drancování
Derived terms

Etymology 2

Noun

Template:cs-noun form

  1. genitive plural of plena

References


Friulian

Etymology

From Latin plēnus.

Adjective

plen

  1. full

Derived terms


Norwegian Bokmål

Norwegian Wikipedia has an article on:
Wikipedia no

Etymology

From English plain and French plaine; related to plan

Noun

plen m (definite singular plenen, indefinite plural plener, definite plural plenene)

  1. a lawn

Synonyms

Derived terms

References


Norwegian Nynorsk

Etymology

From English plain and French plaine; related to plan

Noun

plen m (definite singular plenen, indefinite plural plenar, definite plural plenane)

  1. a lawn

References


Occitan

Etymology

From Old Occitan (compare the form ple), from Latin plēnus. Cognates include Catalan ple, French plein and Italian pieno

Adjective

plen m (feminine singular plena, masculine plural plens, feminine plural plenas)

  1. full

Derived terms


Serbo-Croatian

Alternative forms

Etymology

From earlier *plěnъ, from Proto-Slavic *pelnъ.

Pronunciation

Noun

plȇn m (Cyrillic spelling пле̑н)

  1. booty, plunder

Declension


Spanish

Etymology

From French plein, compare Spanish lleno.

Adjective

plen m or f (masculine and feminine plural plenes)

  1. (Louisiana) much, a lot

Adverb

plen

  1. (Louisiana) much, a lot