even

Προτάσεις
An user
She
👩
  has   always   been   very   kind   and   friendly   to   everyone even   strangers .

Ήταν πάντα πολύ ευγενικός και φιλικός σε όλους, ακόμη και ξένους.

An user
However the   cat
😺
  is   very   rare   now   even   in   the   national park
🏞️
.

Ωστόσο, η γάτα είναι πολύ σπάνια τώρα ακόμη και στο Εθνικό Πάρκο.

An user
They   even   demanded   separate   eating   and   toilet
🚽
  facilities .

Ζήτησαν ακόμη και ξεχωριστές εγκαταστάσεις διατροφής και τουαλέτας.

An user
Having   heard   that the   boy
👦
  became   even   more   interested   in   alchemy .

Έχοντας ακούσει αυτό, το αγόρι έγινε ακόμα περισσότερο ενδιαφέρον για την αλχημεία.

Εννοια (Αγγλικός)

Έννοιες

ακόμα

άρτιος

ομαλός

βράδυ

εσπέρα

σούρουπο

ακόμη και

ζυγός αριθμός

ισοπεδώνω

καν

ομοίως

όμοιος

ακόμη

ακόμα και

απόγευμα

δειλινό

επίπεδο

Συχνότητα

A1
Προφέρεται ως (IPA)
/ˈiːvən/
Ετυμολογία (Αγγλικός)

In summary

From Middle English even, from Old English efn (“flat; level, even, equal”), from Proto-West Germanic *ebn, from Proto-Germanic *ebnaz, from Proto-Indo-European *(h₁)em-no- (“equal, straight; flat, level, even”). Cognate with Saterland Frisian íeuwen (“even, flat”), West Frisian even (“even”), Alemannic German ëben (“even”), Cimbrian ébane (“even”), Dutch even (“even, equal, same”), effen (“leveled”), German eben (“even, flat, level”), Danish jævn (“even, flat, smooth”), Icelandic jafn (“even”), Norwegian Bokmål jevn (“even, smooth”), Norwegian Nynorsk jamn (“even, smooth”), Swedish jämn (“even, level, smooth”), Gothic 𐌹𐌱𐌽𐍃 (ibns, “even”), Old Cornish eun (“equal, right”) (attested in Vocabularium Cornicum eun-hinsic (“iustus, i. e., just”)), Old Breton eun (“equal, right”) (attested in Eutychius Glossary eunt (“aequus, i. e., equal”)), Middle Breton effn, Breton eeun, Sanskrit अम्नस् (amnás, “(adverb) just, just now; at once”). The verb descends from Middle English evenen, from Old English efnan; the adverb from Middle English evene, from Old English efne. The traditional proposal connecting the Germanic adjective with the root Proto-Indo-European *h₂eym- (Latin imāgō (“picture, image, likeness, copy”), Latin aemulus (“competitor, rival”), Sanskrit यम (yamá, “pair, twin”)) is problematic from a phonological point of view. For the meaning development compare with Latin aequus (“equal, level, even, flat, horizontal”), Russian ро́вный (róvnyj, “even, level, flat, smooth”), ра́вный (rávnyj, “equal”), по́ровну (pórovnu, “in equal parts”).

Notes

Sign in to write sticky notes