See also: кіно

Bulgarian edit

 
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Pronunciation edit

  • IPA(key): [ˈkino]
  • (file)

Noun edit

ки́но (kínon

  1. cinema, movies
  2. cinematography

Declension edit

References edit

  • кино”, in Речник на българския език [Dictionary of the Bulgarian Language] (in Bulgarian), Sofia: Bulgarian Academy of Sciences, 2014

Anagrams edit

Chechen edit

Etymology edit

From Russian кино́ (kinó).

Noun edit

кино (kino? (plural кинош)

  1. movie

Kazakh edit

Alternative scripts
Arabic كينو
Cyrillic кино
Latin kino

Etymology edit

From Russian кино́ (kinó), from German Kino.

Noun edit

кино (kino)

  1. cinema

Declension edit

Kyrgyz edit

Etymology edit

From Russian кино́ (kinó).

Noun edit

кино (kino) (Arabic spelling كئنو)

  1. cinema

Macedonian edit

Pronunciation edit

Noun edit

кино (kinon

  1. cinema, movies

Declension edit

Mongolian edit

Mongolian
(Mongolia)(China)
ᠻᠢᠨᠣ᠋
(kino)
ᠺᠢᠨᠣ᠋
(kino)
Cyrillic
кино
(kino)

Etymology edit

Borrowed from Russian кино́ n inan sg (kinó, cinema movie theater; film, movie), from German Kino n sg.

Pronunciation edit

Noun edit

кино (kino)

  1. cinema, movie, film
    Тэр кино үзнэ.
    Ter kino üzne.
    He sees/will see a film.

Declension edit

Derived terms edit

verbs

Related terms edit

Further reading edit

  • кино”, in Монгол хэлний их тайлбар толь [Dictionary of the Mongolian Language] (in Mongolian), Institute of Linguistics of the Mongolian Academy of Sciences, 2016–present

Russian edit

Etymology edit

Clipping of кинемато́граф (kinematógraf, cinematography) or German Kino.

Pronunciation edit

Noun edit

кино́ (kinón inan (indeclinable, relational adjective кино́шный)

  1. movie, motion picture, film
    звуково́е кино́zvukovóje kinósound film (as opposed to "silent film")
  2. movies, cinema, the pictures

Usage notes edit

The word is generally indeclinable, but is sometimes declined jocularly and colloquially (genitive singular кина́ (kiná), genitive plural кин (kin), prepositional plural ки́нах (kínax) etc.), especially in the phrase кина́ не будет (kiná ne budet, party's over, show's over, literally there will be no movie) popularized by the 1971 Soviet film Gentlemen of Fortune.

Derived terms edit

Descendants edit

Tuvan edit

Etymology edit

From Russian кино́ (kinó), a clipping of кинемато́граф (kinematógraf, cinematography) and/or a borrowing from German Kino.

Pronunciation edit

Noun edit

кино (kino)

  1. movie, motion picture