释义 |
en In. Derivatives include inner, entrails, industry, and dysentery.- in1, (preposition), from Old English in, in;
- in1, (adverb), from Old English inn, into, inne, inside;
- inn, from Old English inn, habitation, inn;
- tsimmes, from Old High German in, in;
- inner, from Old English innera, farther in, inner, from Germanic (comparative) *inn(e)ra;
- ben, from Old English binnan, within;
- bilander, from Middle Dutch binnen, within (be, by; see ambhi + innan, in, within). Both (i) and (ii) from Germanic *innan. a-f all from Germanic *in.
- en-1, in-2, from Latin in, in‑, in, into.
- en-2; enkephalin, parenchyma, parenthesis, from Greek en, en‑.
- Suffixed form *en-t(e)ro‑.
- intro-; introduce, introit, intromit, introrse, introspect, from Latin intrō, inward, within;
- enter, intra-; intrados, from Latin intrā, inside, within;
- interim, intrinsic, from Latin interim, meanwhile, with ablative suffix -im, and intrīnsecus, on the inside, from int(e)rim + secus, alongside (see sekw-1).
- Suffixed form *en-ter. entrails, inter-, interior, intern, internal, from Latin inter, inter‑, between, among.
- intima, intimate2, from Latin (superlative) intimus, innermost (*-mo‑, superlative suffix).
- Extended form *en-do.
- industry, from Latin industrius, diligent (Archaic Latin indostruus; *stru‑, to construct; see ster-2);
- indigent, from Latin indigēre, to be in need (egēre, to be in need). Both a and b from indu‑, within, from Archaic Latin endo;
- endo-, from Greek endon, endo‑, within.
- Suffixed form *en-tos.
- dedans, intestine, intine, intussusception, from Latin intus, within, inside;
- ento-, from Greek entos, within.
- Suffixed form *en-tero‑.
- enteric, entero-, enteron; dysentery, exenterate, mesentery, from Greek enteron, intestine;
- atoll, perhaps ultimately from Sanskrit antara‑, interior.
- Extended form *ens.
- episode, from Greek eis, into;
- suffixed form *ens-ō. esoteric, esotropia, from Greek esō, within.
- Possibly suffixed zero-grade form *n̥-dha. and, from Old English and, and, from Germanic *anda, *unda.
[Pokorny 1. en 311.] |
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