abessinier
Norwegian Bokmål
Alternative forms
Etymology
Abessinia + -er, first part from the place name Abyssinia, from Medieval Latin Abissini, a form of Abissīnus (“Abyssinian, Ethiopian”), either from Arabic الحَبَشِيّ (al-ḥabašiyy, “Ethiopian”), a form of الْحَبَشَة (al-ḥabaša, “Abyssinia”) (with the suffix ـِيّ (-iyy)), from the root ح ب ش (ḥ b š), or from Amharic ሀበሻ (häbäša, “Habesha (The inhabitants of Abyssinia)”). Last part from Old Norse -ari, from Medieval Latin and Middle Low German words, both from Proto-Germanic *-ārijaz, from Latin -ārius.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /abəˈsiːnɪər/
Audio (file) - Rhymes: -ər
- Hyphenation: ab‧es‧si‧ni‧er
Noun
abessinier m (definite singular abessinieren, indefinite plural abessiniere, definite plural abessinierne)
- (dated, historical) an Abyssinian (a native or inhabitant of Abyssinia, and older name for Ethiopia)
- Synonym: abyssiner
- 1901, Naturen:
- abessinierne samler frøene af dette græs
- the abyssinians gather the seeds of this grass
Derived terms
- abessinierbrønn (“tube well (Abyssinian well)”)
References
- “abessinier” in The Bokmål Dictionary.
- “abessinier” in Det Norske Akademis ordbok (NAOB).
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