Hungarian edit

Etymology edit

ing +‎ -et

Pronunciation edit

  • IPA(key): [ˈiŋɡɛt]
  • Hyphenation: in‧get

Noun edit

inget

  1. accusative singular of ing

Indonesian edit

Pronunciation edit

  • IPA(key): [ˈɪŋət̚]
  • Hyphenation: inget

Etymology 1 edit

From Javanese inget (ꦲꦶꦔꦠ꧀), from Proto-Malayo-Polynesian *iŋat, from Proto-Austronesian *iŋat.

Verb edit

ingêt

  1. informal form of ingat.

Etymology 2 edit

From Gayo [Term?].

Noun edit

ingêt (first-person possessive ingetku, second-person possessive ingetmu, third-person possessive ingetnya)

  1. the decree of king.

Further reading edit

Swedish edit

Pronunciation edit

  • IPA(key): /ˈɪŋˌɛt/, [ˈɪŋːˌɛ̂t]
  • (file)

Determiner edit

inget

  1. neuter singular of ingen
    Vi har inget smör kvar
    We have no butter left
    Inget lejon får komma in här!
    No lion must enter here! (a rare neuter animal)

Pronoun edit

inget

  1. neuter singular of ingen
    Inget av detta är en slump
    None of this is a coincidence
    Inget av fallen har lösts
    None of the cases [neuter] have been resolved
    Vi såg många djur, men inget var en pingvin
    We saw many animals [neuter], but none of them were a penguin [Uncommon enough to likely give native speakers pause, but works. Something like "... men inga var pingviner" (... but none were penguins) is more common.]
  2. Synonym of ingenting (nothing)
    inget annat
    nothing else
    • 1990, Lasse Holm, Ingela Forsman (lyrics and music), “Inget stoppar oss nu (I natt, i natt) [Nothing stops us now (Tonight, tonight)]”, in Black Jack, performed by Black Jack:
      Ingenting som vi gör är tabu, inget stoppar oss nu.
      Nothing that we do is taboo, nothing stops us now.
    • 1994, Lisa Ekdahl (lyrics and music), “Vem vet [Who knows]”, in Lisa Ekdahl:
      Vem vet? Inte du. Vem vet? Inte jag. Vi vet ingenting nu. Vi vet inget idag.
      Who knows? Not you. Who knows? Not I. We know nothing now. We know nothing today.

Usage notes edit

When no specific noun is implied from context, the common gender form ingen is used for "no one, nobody." That is, for people and to some degree for animals. Note that the vast majority of living things are common gender.

Synonyms edit

  • ingentingen (nonstandard variant of aforementioned synonym)