English edit

Adjective edit

chim (comparative more chim, superlative most chim)

  1. Alternative form of cheem

Anagrams edit

Muong edit

Etymology edit

From Proto-Vietic *-ciːm, from Proto-Mon-Khmer *cim ~ *ciim ~ *ciəm ~ *caim ~ *cum (bird).

Pronunciation edit

  • IPA(key): /cim¹/, [t͡ɕiːm¹ ~ ciːm¹]

Noun edit

chim

  1. (Mường Bi) bird

Romanian edit

Etymology edit

Borrowed from French chyme.

Noun edit

chim n (plural chimuri)

  1. chyme

Declension edit

Vietnamese edit

 
Vietnamese Wikipedia has an article on:
Wikipedia vi

Pronunciation edit

Etymology 1 edit

From Proto-Vietic *-ciːm, from Proto-Mon-Khmer *cim ~ *ciim ~ *ciəm ~ *caim ~ *cum (bird); cognates include Mon ဂစေံ (həcem, bird), Mang θɤm⁶ and Bahnar sem (bird). Munda cognates include Santali ᱥᱤᱢ (sim, chicken).

Noun edit

(classifier con) chim (𫚳, 𪀄)

  1. (zoology) a bird (an animal of the class Aves)
Derived terms edit

Etymology 2 edit

From etymology 1. For some parallels, compare English cock, Chinese (điểu, bird) and (điểu, penis), Thai นกเขา (nók-kǎo, pigeon). See also cu, .

Alternative forms edit

  • trym (euphemistic orthographic variant)

Noun edit

(classifier con) chim

  1. (slang, anatomy) penis, cock; dick
Synonyms edit
See also edit

White Hmong edit

Etymology edit

This etymology is missing or incomplete. Please add to it, or discuss it at the Etymology scriptorium.
Particularly: “Not mentioned by Ratliff at all. Looks borrowed from Chinese (, “gas; anger”).”

Pronunciation edit

Verb edit

chim

  1. to hate, be angry at, be incensed

Derived terms edit

References edit

  • Heimbach, Ernest E. (1979) White Hmong — English Dictionary[1], SEAP Publications, →ISBN, page 24.