tsin
Aromanian edit
Alternative forms edit
Etymology edit
From Latin cēnō. Compare Romanian cina, Sicilian cinari.
Verb edit
tsin first-singular present indicative (past participle tsinatã)
Related terms edit
Bourbonnais-Berrichon edit
Alternative forms edit
- chin
Noun edit
tsin m[1]
References edit
- ^ Paul Duchon - Grammaire Et Dictionnaire Du Patois Bourbonnais (canton De Vareness)
edit
Pronunciation edit
Noun edit
tsin (compound form tsi-, tsin-)
Derived terms edit
Derived terms
- akʼah sisíʼí tsin (“eucalyptus”)
- tsikʼi (“in the tree, on the tree”)
- tsin bigaan (“tree limb”)
- Tsin Bikeeʼ Dineʼé
- tsin deigházhígíí (“rodents”)
- tsin ditʼinii (“ground squirrel”)
- tsin ííʼáii (“tree”)
- tsin naabąąs, tsinaabąąs (“wagon”)
- tsin naaʼeeł (“ship, vessel, boat, canoe, raft”)
- tsin naaʼeeł bee daʼahijighánígíí (“battleship”)
- tsin naaʼeeł táłtłʼááh naagháhígíí (“submarine”)
- tsin yąąh dzootʼihí (“nuthatch”)
- tsin yiłkaałii (“woodpecker”)
- tsinlátah (“treetop”)