image
From Wiktionary, the free dictionary
From Wiktionary, the free dictionary
From Middle English ymage, borrowed from Old French image, from Latin imāgō (“a copy, likeness, image”), from Proto-Indo-European *h₂eym-; the same PIE root is the source of imitari (“to copy, imitate”); see imitate. Displaced native Old English biliþe (“an image, a representation, resemblance, likeness; pattern, example”). Doublet of imago.
image (plural images)
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image (third-person singular simple present images, present participle imaging, simple past and past participle imaged)
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image n (plural images)
Inherited from Old French image, borrowed from Latin imaginem (“a copy, likeness, image”).
image f (plural images)
image
image
image m or n (definite singular imagen or imageet, indefinite plural imager or image, definite plural imagene or imagea or imageene)
image m or n (definite singular imagen or imaget, indefinite plural imagar or image, definite plural imagane or imaga)
Borrowed from Latin imāgō, imāginem.
image oblique singular, f (oblique plural images, nominative singular image, nominative plural images)
Originally, an unadapted borrowing from French image; later reinforced by an unadapted borrowing from English image, resulting in three possible pronunciations, with the English pronunciations considered pretentious by some. Doublet of imago.
image m inan (indeclinable)
or
Indeclinable.
image c
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