Bedeutung (Englisch)

Gegenteil von
off, against
Frequenz

A1
Ausgesprochen als (IPA)
/ɒn/
Etymologie (Englisch)

In summary

Etymology tree Proto-West Germanic *ana Old English on Middle English on English on From Middle English on, from Old English on, an (“on, upon, onto, in, into”), from Proto-West Germanic *ana, from Proto-Germanic *ana (“on, at”), from Proto-Indo-European *h₂en-. Cognate with North Frisian a (“on, in”), Saterland Frisian an (“on, at”), West Frisian oan (“on, at”), Dutch aan (“on, at, to”), Low German an (“on, at”), German an (“to, at, on”), Swedish Ă„ (“on, at, in”), Faroese ĂĄ (“on, onto, in, at”), Icelandic ĂĄ (“on, in”), Gothic đŒ°đŒœđŒ° (ana), Ancient Greek áŒ€ÎœÎŹ (anĂĄ, “up, upon”), Albanian nĂ« (“in”); and from Old Norse upp ĂĄ: Danish pĂ„, Swedish pĂ„, Norwegian pĂ„, see upon.

Notes

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