See also: rain, ràin, and räin

English edit

Proper noun edit

Rain

  1. A female given name.

Anagrams edit

Estonian edit

Etymology edit

Short form of Rainer and other Germanic compound given names with the first element meaning "counsel".

Proper noun edit

Rain

  1. a male given name

Related terms edit

German edit

 
Ein Rain

Alternative forms edit

Etymology edit

From Middle High German rein, which also appears in reinkurni, reinifano (tansy), Modern German Rainfarn, for this plant’s growing as field mark, from Old High German rein (wall, baulk, ridge), from Proto-Germanic *rainō, cognate with Icelandic rein, Swedish ren, English rean (ridge, furrow, gutter), Lithuanian raivė̃ (furrow), Latvian rieva (furrow), Latin rīma (slit), all perhaps related to Proto-Indo-European *h₁reh₁- and the antecedents of Reihe, English row, as well as to reif, English ripe.

Pronunciation edit

Noun edit

Rain m (strong, genitive Rains or Raines, plural Raine)

  1. edgepath (the space between two fields)
    • 1906, Hermann Hesse, chapter 2, in Unterm Rad [Beneath the Wheel]‎[1], Berlin: S. Fischer:
      Auf den vielen heidigen Rainen zwischen Wald und Wiese flammte brandgelb der zähe Ginster, dann kamen lange, lilarote Bänder von Erika, dann die Wiesen selber, zumeist schon vor dem zweiten Schnitte stehend, von Schaumkraut, Lichtnelken, Salbei, Skabiosen farbig überwuchert.
      (please add an English translation of this quotation)
    • 1916, Hermann Löns, Mein buntes Buch[2]:
      Mitten durch die Feldmark zieht sich ein Rain neben dem Koppelwege hin. Wenn ich nicht Zeit habe, den fernen Wald aufzusuchen, gehe ich hierhin. Gestört werde ich von Menschen nicht.
      (please add an English translation of this quotation)
  2. (Switzerland) small slope, incline

Declension edit

Derived terms edit

Related terms edit

References edit

Further reading edit

Romansch edit

Alternative forms edit

Etymology edit

From German Rhein.

 
Romansch Wikipedia has an article on:
Wikipedia rm

Proper noun edit

Rain m

  1. (Rumantsch Grischun, Puter, Vallader) the Rhine (a river in Western Europe)