lemo
Esperanto edit
Etymology edit
From English lemma, Italian lemma, Latin lemma, etc., ultimately from Ancient Greek λῆμμα (lêmma).
Pronunciation edit
Noun edit
lemo (accusative singular lemon, plural lemoj, accusative plural lemojn)
- (mathematics) lemma
- 1949, Memoirs of the Faculty of Science, Kyūsyū University: Kyūshū Daigaku Rigakubu Kiyō. Mathematics:
- Laŭ la lemo 2, C estas fermita kaj kompakta, ...
- Per lemma 2, C is closed and compact, ...
- 1995, Congrès international de Cybernétique, Actes: Proceedings, →ISBN:
- Teoremoj, lemoj, korolarioj, difinoj, propozicioj diversaj estas kutime metitaj, ajnalingve, komence de paragrafo, sekvataj aŭ antaŭataj de numeroj, sen ia ajn artikolo.
- Theorems, lemmata, corrolaries, definitions, various propositions are usually put, in any language, at the beginning of a paragraph, followed or preceded by numbers, without any article.
Hausa edit
Etymology edit
Apparently from Arabic لَيْمُون (laymūn), although Blench notes that the fruit itself may well have been introduced from the south.
Pronunciation edit
Noun edit
lḕmō m (plural lēmunā̀, possessed form lḕmon)
- orange (fruit)
- soft drink
Descendants edit
- → Nupe: lèmú
Ido edit
Etymology edit
Borrowed from Esperanto lemo, Ancient Greek λῆμμᾰ (lêmma), English lemma, French lemme, German Lemma, Italian lemma, Russian ле́мма (lémma), Spanish lema.
Pronunciation edit
Noun edit
lemo (plural lemi)
Lindu edit
Noun edit
lemo
Western Huasteca Nahuatl edit
Noun edit
lemo