Hann
See also: hann
English
Etymology
From a Middle English given name derived from Johan, variant of John, or less often from Henry or Randolph.
Verb
Hann (third-person singular simple present Hanns, present participle Hanning, simple past and past participle Hanned)
- (transitive, signal processing) To apply the Hann function to (a signal).
Anagrams
Pennsylvania German
Etymology 1
From Middle High German hirne, hërne, from Old High German hirni (“brain”), from Proto-West Germanic *hirʀnī, from Proto-Germanic *hirzniją (“brain”). Compare German Hirn.
Etymology 2
From Middle High German and Old High German horn. Compare German Horn, Dutch hoorn, English horn.
Polish
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /xann/
Audio (file) - Rhymes: -ann
- Syllabification: Hann
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