høne

See also: hone, Hone, and Hōne

Danish

Etymology

From Old Norse hǿna, from Proto-Germanic *hōnijǭ, related to *hanjō, ultimately from Proto-Indo-European *kan- (to sing), *kana-.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /hœːnə/, [ˈhœːnə], [ˈhœːn̩]
  • (file)

Noun

høne c (singular definite hønen, plural indefinite høner or høns)

  1. hen
  2. chicken (as a food)
  3. chicken, (Gallus)

Inflection

Derived terms

  • hønsefarm c
  • hønsehus n
  • hønsekødsuppe c
  • hønseri n
  • hønsestige c

See also

Norwegian Bokmål

Etymology

From Old Norse hǿna, from Proto-Germanic *hōnijǭ, related to *hanjō, ultimately from Proto-Indo-European *kan- (to sing), *kana-.

Noun

høne m or f (definite singular høna or hønen, indefinite plural høner or høns, definite plural hønene)

  1. a hen (female bird of Gallus gallus domesticus, and some other species).
  2. a fanny (UK slang)
  3. (sports) a shuttlecock

Usage notes

The plural høns is listed separately in dictionaries, and can also mean males and females collectively.

Synonyms

Derived terms

See also

References

Norwegian Nynorsk

Høner med ekte gåsefjør. (shuttlecocks with goose feathers)

Etymology

From Old Norse hǿna, from Proto-Germanic *hōnijǭ, related to *hanjō, ultimately from Proto-Indo-European *kan- (to sing), *kana-.

Noun

høne f (plural høna)

  1. a hen
  2. a fanny (UK slang)
  3. (sports) a shuttlecock

Usage notes

The plural høns is listed separately in dictionaries, and can also mean males and females collectively.

Synonyms

References

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