Juno
From Wiktionary, the free dictionary
From Wiktionary, the free dictionary
From Middle English Juno, from Latin Iūnō of uncertain origin. One hypothesis is derivation from Proto-Indo-European *dyúh₃onh₂- (“she of heavenly authority”), from *dyew- (“sky, heaven”) + *-Hō (“burden, authority”), reflecting her role as goddess of rulers. Another is derivation from Proto-Indo-European *h₂yúh₃onh₂- (“the young goddess”), from *h₂eyu- (“long time, lifetime”) + *-Hō (“burden, authority”), making it cognate with Latin iuvenis (“young”). Both would have produced the unattested early Latin form *Iuvō, declined with the root Iūn- and eventually normalized to Iūnō.
Juno
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Juno f
Juno
Juno m (strong, genitive Junos or Juno, plural Junos)
This form is used almost exclusively in speech, in order to better distinguish between Juni and Juli.
Juno
Jūnō f sg (genitive Jūnōnis); third declension
Third-declension noun, singular only.
Juno
Juno f (genitive singular Junóny, declension pattern of žena)
singulare tantum | |
---|---|
nominative | Juno |
genitive | Junóny |
dative | Junóne |
accusative | Junónu |
locative | Junóne |
instrumental | Junónou |
Juno f
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