-an-
See also: Appendix:Variations of "an"
Ido
Etymology
From Esperanto -an-, from English -an, French -en, Italian -ano, -ana, Spanish -ano, -ana, from Latin -ānus.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /an/
Suffix
-an-
- a person that is "a member of..."
- an individual pertaining to a class (city, country, ensembly)
- a person or a thing that pertain to a domain (country, society)
Derived terms
Ido terms suffixed with -an-
See also
Norwegian Nynorsk
Etymology
This is really an interfix variant of the suffix -an, used to form directional adverbs. From Old Norse suffix -an, from Proto-Germanic *-anē, used to denote ablativ adverbs.
Interfix
-an-
- Used to bind together a directional adverb and a preposition to create composite ones.
Usage notes
- Alternatively, -a- may be used preceding a consonant (bortantil or bortatil), but never preceding a vowel (only bortanom). The same rules also apply (and have also applied) to compounds where -a(n)- is not strictly an interfix, but a part of the word itself (ovanpå or ovapå). These have been the current rules since a 2022 spelling decision.[1]
Derived terms
Norwegian Nynorsk terms interfixed with -an-
References
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