See also: Thun and dhun

Gamilaraay edit

Etymology edit

Compare Ngiyambaa thun (tail) and Wiradjuri dhuun (penis, tail).

Noun edit

thun

  1. penis
  2. tail

See also edit

German edit

Verb edit

thun (irregular, third-person singular present thut, past tense that, past participle gethan, past subjunctive thäte, auxiliary haben)

  1. Obsolete spelling of tun which was deprecated in 1902 following the Second Orthographic Conference of 1901.
    • 1798, Justus Möser, Die Tugend auf der Schaubühne, oder Harlekins Heurath:
      Ein Mädchen auf der Bühne muß oft verliebt thun, oft küssen, oft lachen...
      A girl on a stage must often act as though she has fallen in love, [must] often kiss, often laugh...

Conjugation edit

  • The 1st person singular indicative present active is also (ich) thu.
  • The 3rd person singular indicative present active is also (er) thuet.
  • In the preterite, the indicative is also spelled with ä or e in place of a. For example, (sie) theten.

Ngiyambaa edit

Etymology edit

Compare Gamilaraay thun (tail) and Wiradjuri dhuun (penis, tail).

Noun edit

thun

  1. tail

Scottish Gaelic edit

Preposition edit

thun (+ genitive)

  1. Alternative form of chun

Vietnamese edit

Alternative forms edit

Pronunciation edit

Noun edit

(classifier sợi, cọng) thun (, , 𦀹)

  1. (dialectal, chiefly Southern Vietnam) elastic

Derived terms edit