Bavarian edit

Etymology edit

From Middle High German genuoc, from Old High German ginuog, from Proto-West Germanic *ganōg, from Proto-Germanic *ganōgaz. Cognates include German genug, Yiddish גענוג (genug), Dutch genoeg, Low German noog, English enough, West Frisian genôch, Danish nok, Swedish nog, Gothic 𐌲𐌰𐌽𐍉𐌷𐍃 (ganōhs).

Pronunciation edit

Determiner edit

gnua

  1. (invariable) enough, sufficient, an adequate number or amount of
    Mia håbn ned gnua Göd.We don't have enough money.

Usage notes edit

  • Gnua can never follow an article or another determiner. Moreover, it is commonly used after the referent for emphasis: De håbn Gejd gnua! (“They have money enough!”)

Pronoun edit

gnua

  1. (invariable) enough, an adequate number or amount
    Des is gnua.That's enough.

Adverb edit

gnua

  1. enough, sufficiently, in an adequate way
    De Kinder håbn gnua gspuit.The children have played enough.
    Des Zimmer is groß gnua.The room is big enough.

Derived terms edit