See also: Breton, bretón, and Bréton

Esperanto edit

Noun edit

breton

  1. accusative singular of breto

French edit

Etymology edit

See Breton

Pronunciation edit

  • IPA(key): /bʁə.tɔ̃/
  • (file)

Adjective edit

breton (feminine bretonne, masculine plural bretons, feminine plural bretonnes)

  1. (relational) Breton (of or relating to Brittany, its language or people)

Derived terms edit

Noun edit

breton m (uncountable)

  1. the Breton language
    Plusieurs mots de la langue française tel que bijou sont issus du breton.Several words of the French language such as bijou come from Breton.

Derived terms edit

Further reading edit

Anagrams edit

Occitan edit

Pronunciation edit

Adjective edit

breton m (feminine singular bretona, masculine plural bretons, feminine plural bretonas)

  1. Breton (of or relating to Brittany, its language or people)

Noun edit

breton m (plural bretons)

  1. the Breton language

Old French edit

Etymology edit

From Latin Brittonem, accusative singular of Britto.

Adjective edit

breton m (oblique and nominative feminine singular bretone)

  1. Breton (of or relating to Brittany, its language or people)

Declension edit

Old High German edit

Etymology edit

Possibly from a Proto-West Germanic *bredōn, a variant of *breutan (to beat). Compare Old English breotan (to break, destroy).

Verb edit

brëtōn

  1. to beat down, to fell (to the ground)
    breton mit sinu billiu
    beat down with his sword

Conjugation edit

Romanian edit

Pronunciation edit

Etymology 1 edit

Borrowed from French breton.

Adjective edit

breton m or n (feminine singular bretonă, masculine plural bretoni, feminine and neuter plural bretone)

  1. Breton
Declension edit

Noun edit

breton m (plural bretoni)

  1. Breton (person)

Etymology 2 edit

From French [à la] bretonne.

Noun edit

breton n (plural bretoane)

  1. (hair) bangs, fringe