Dutch Low Saxon edit

Etymology edit

From Middle Low German nîe, nü̂we, from Old Saxon niuwi. Related to West Frisian nij, Dutch nieuw, German neu, English new, Swedish ny.

Adjective edit

nij (Gronings)

  1. new
  2. curious

West Frisian edit

Etymology edit

From Old Frisian , nīe, from Proto-West Germanic *niwi.

Pronunciation edit

Adjective edit

nij

  1. new

Inflection edit

Inflection of nij
uninflected nij
inflected nije
comparative nijer
positive comparative superlative
predicative/adverbial nij nijer it nijst
it nijste
indefinite c. sing. nije nijere nijste
n. sing. nij nijer nijste
plural nije nijere nijste
definite nije nijere nijste
partitive nijs nijers

Derived terms edit

Further reading edit

  • nij”, in Wurdboek fan de Fryske taal (in Dutch), 2011

Zhuang edit

Etymology edit

From Proto-Tai *ʰniːꟲ (debt). Cognate with Thai หนี้ (nîi), Northern Thai ᩉ᩠ᨶᩦ᩶, Lao ໜີ້ (), ᦐᦲᧉ (ṅii²), Shan ၼီႈ (nīi), Tai Nüa ᥘᥤᥲ (), Phake ꩫီ (), Ahom 𑜃𑜣 (), Nong Zhuang nij, Zuojiang Zhuang nij.

Pronunciation edit

Noun edit

nij (Sawndip form 𪥤, 1957–1982 spelling niз)

  1. debt