koen
Danish edit
Noun edit
koen c
Dutch edit
Etymology edit
From Middle Dutch coene, from Old Dutch *kuoni, from Proto-Germanic *kōniz, the root of which also yielded the Dutch verb kunnen.
Pronunciation edit
Adjective edit
koen (comparative koener, superlative koenst)
Inflection edit
Inflection of koen | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
uninflected | koen | |||
inflected | koene | |||
comparative | koener | |||
positive | comparative | superlative | ||
predicative/adverbial | koen | koener | het koenst het koenste | |
indefinite | m./f. sing. | koene | koenere | koenste |
n. sing. | koen | koener | koenste | |
plural | koene | koenere | koenste | |
definite | koene | koenere | koenste | |
partitive | koens | koeners | — |
Derived terms edit
Finnish edit
Verb edit
koen
Anagrams edit
Indonesian edit
Etymology edit
From Suroboyoan Javanese koen (“you”). Doublet of kowe.
Pronoun edit
koen
Synonyms edit
Indonesian informal second-person pronouns:
- anta (informal, mainly used by Muslim community)
- antum (informal, mainly used by Muslim community)
- coen (slang, East Java)
- ente (informal, mainly used by Betawi ethnic group)
- kamu (intimate)
- ko, kowe (informal, Java)
- kon, koen (colloquial, East Java)
- lu, lo, loe, elu (informal, mainly used by Betawi ethnic group)
- mika, mike (informal, Eastern Sumatra)