Oznaczający (Angielski)

Koncepcje

jeden

jedynka

jedno

ktoś

pewien

raz

wspólny

jedna

się

osobniczy

jakiś

yEdEn

jednostka

jednostkowy

jedyny

Przeciwieństwo
zero#Determiner, no#Determiner, ;, a few#Determiner, a couple of, a handful of, several#Determiner, multiple#Determiner, various#Determiner, many#Determiner, numerous#Determiner, countless#Determiner
Częstotliwość

A1
Wymawiane jako (IPA)
/wʌn/
Etymologia (Angielski)

In summary

PIE word *h₁óynos From Middle English oon, on, oan, an, from Old English ān (“one”), from Proto-West Germanic *ain, from Proto-Germanic *ainaz (“one”), from Proto-Indo-European *h₁óynos (“single, one”). Cognate with Scots ae, ane, wan, yin (“one”); North Frisian ån (“one”); Saterland Frisian aan (“one”); West Frisian ien (“one”); Dutch een, één (“one”); German Low German een; German ein, eins (“one”); Danish en (“one”); Swedish en (“one”); Norwegian Nynorsk ein (“one”), Icelandic einn (“one”); Latin ūnus (“one”) (Old Latin oinos); Russian оди́н (odín), Spanish uno. Doublet of a, an, and Uno. The use as an indefinite personal pronoun may have been influenced by unrelated French on, although the Germanic languages widely use cognates for the same sense (usually in non-subject function, but also in subject function, e.g. Luxembourgish een). Verb form from Middle English onen.

Notes

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