English edit

Etymology edit

See en- § Etymology.

Prefix edit

em-

  1. The form taken by en- before the labial consonants b and p, as it assimilates place of articulation.

Derived terms edit

Related terms edit

See also edit

Anagrams edit

Catalan edit

Prefix edit

em-

  1. em-, Alternative form of en-

French edit

Pronunciation edit

Prefix edit

em-

  1. em- (form of en- before b, m or p)

Northern Ndebele edit

Prefix edit

em-

  1. Class 9 adjective concord; form of en- used before stems beginning with a labial consonant.

Northern Ohlone edit

Alternative forms edit

  • im- (raising before i or u in the next syllable)

Etymology edit

Compare Southern Ohlone men-.

Pronoun edit

em-

  1. you, thou (second-person, singular, subject proclitic pronoun)

Pronoun edit

em-

  1. your, thy (second-person, singular, possessive pronoun)

See also edit

References edit

María de los Angeles Colós, José Guzman, and John Peabody Harrington (1930s) Chochenyo Field Notes (Survey of California and Other Indian Langauges)‎[1], Unpublished

Portuguese edit

Alternative forms edit

  • e- (before M and N)
  • en- (before vowels and other consonants)

Prefix edit

em-

  1. forms verbs indicating motion or transformation into the prefixed noun; in-
    Synonym: in-

Spanish edit

Prefix edit

em-

  1. Alternative form of en- used before b or p; em-

Further reading edit

Xhosa edit

Prefix edit

em-

  1. Class 9 adjective concord; form of en- used before stems beginning with a labial consonant.

Zulu edit

Prefix edit

ḗm-

  1. Class 9 adjective concord; form of en- used before stems beginning with a labial consonant.

References edit