sin-

From Wiktionary, the free dictionary

Irish

Alternative forms

  • sion-

Prefix

sin-

  1. syn-

Derived terms

  • siongamacht (syngamy)
  • cuas-

Italian

Etymology

Borrowed from Ancient Greek, from σύν (sún, with, in company with, together with).

Prefix

sin-

  1. syn-

Old English

Alternative forms

  • sine-

Etymology

From Proto-West Germanic *sin-, from Proto-Germanic *sin-, from Proto-Indo-European *sem-. Cognate with Old Frisian sin-, Old Saxon sin-, Old High German sin-, Old Norse sí-.

Pronunciation

Prefix

sin-

  1. ever-, continual, perpetual
  2. (poetic) huge, immense; very

Derived terms

Old High German

Etymology

From Proto-West Germanic *sin-, from Proto-Germanic *sin-, from Proto-Indo-European *sem-.

Prefix

sin-

  1. ever-, eternal-

Derived terms

Old Saxon

Etymology

From Proto-West Germanic *sin-, from Proto-Germanic *sin-, from Proto-Indo-European *sem-.

Prefix

sin-

  1. ever-, eternal-

Derived terms

Spanish

Etymology

Borrowed from Ancient Greek, from σύν (sún, with, in company with, together with).

Prefix

sin-

  1. syn-

Derived terms

Further reading

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