Danish

edit

Etymology

edit

From Ancient Greek [Term?].

Pronunciation

edit

Noun

edit

metropol c (singular definite metropolen, plural indefinite metropoler)

  1. metropolis

Declension

edit

References

edit

Middle English

edit

Etymology

edit

From Middle French metropole (town with bishop's seat), from Late Latin mētropolis, from Ancient Greek μητρόπολις (mētrópolis, mother city), from μήτηρ (mḗtēr, mother) + πόλις (pólis, city (state)).

Pronunciation

edit

Noun

edit

metropol (plural metropolis)

  1. A chief city, metropolis.

Descendants

edit
  • English: metropole

References

edit

Norwegian Bokmål

edit
 
Norwegian Wikipedia has an article on:
Wikipedia no

Etymology

edit

From Ancient Greek [Term?] "metropolis".

Noun

edit

metropol m (definite singular metropolen, indefinite plural metropoler, definite plural metropolene)

  1. metropolis
edit

References

edit

Norwegian Nynorsk

edit
 
Norwegian Nynorsk Wikipedia has an article on:
Wikipedia nn

Etymology

edit

From Ancient Greek [Term?] "metropolis".

Noun

edit

metropol m (definite singular metropolen, indefinite plural metropolar, definite plural metropolane)

  1. metropolis
edit

References

edit

Turkish

edit

Etymology

edit

From French métropole, from Latin mētropolis, from Ancient Greek μητρόπολις (mētrópolis, a mother city or state), from μητρο- (mētro-, mother-) + πόλις (pólis, city).

Pronunciation

edit

Noun

edit

metropol (definite accusative metropolü, plural metropoller)

  1. metropolis

Declension

edit
Inflection
Nominative metropol
Definite accusative metropolü
Singular Plural
Nominative metropol metropoller
Definite accusative metropolü metropolleri
Dative metropole metropollere
Locative metropolde metropollerde
Ablative metropolden metropollerden
Genitive metropolün metropollerin
edit