different between dingo vs jingo
dingo
English
Etymology
Borrowed from Dharug dingu (“tame dingo”).
Pronunciation
- (UK) IPA(key): /?d?????/
- Rhymes: -?????
Noun
dingo (plural dingos or dingoes)
- A wild dog native to Australia (Canis familiaris, Canis familiaris dingo, Canis dingo, or Canis lupus dingo).
Hypernyms
- dog
Derived terms
- dry as a dead dingo’s donger
Translations
References
R. M. W. Dixon, Australian Aboriginal Words in English, Oxford University Press, 1990, ?ISBN, pages 65 and 226.
Anagrams
- Godin, Gondi, OD'ing, digon, doing, doïng
Chamorro
Verb
dingo
- to abandon
Czech
Noun
dingo m
- dingo (wild dog native to Australia)
Dutch
Etymology
Borrowed from English dingo, from Dharug dingu.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /?d??.?o?/
- Hyphenation: din?go
Noun
dingo m (plural dingo's)
- dingo, Canis lupus dingo (Australian wild dog)
Esperanto
Etymology
From English dingo, French dingo, German Dingo, Polish dingo, Hungarian dingo and/or Russian ????? (dingo), all ultimately from Dharug dingu (“tame dingo”).
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /?din.?o/
- Hyphenation: din?go
Noun
dingo (accusative singular dingon, plural dingoj, accusative plural dingojn)
- a dingo
Hypernyms
- kanisedo (“canid”)
Hyponyms
- virdingo (idiomatic) (a male dingo)
- dingido (“a young dingo, a dingo pup”)
- dingino (“a female dingo”)
Finnish
Etymology
From English dingo, from Dharug dingu (“tame dingo”).
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /?di??o/, [?di??o?]
- Rhymes: -i??o
- Syllabification: din?go
Noun
dingo
- dingo
Declension
French
Adjective
dingo (plural dingos)
- (slang) mad, crazy, nuts
- obsessed, infatuated with
Italian
Noun
dingo m (plural dinghi) (alternative plural dingo)
- dingo
Japanese
Romanization
dingo
- R?maji transcription of ????
Lithuanian
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /?d????o?/
Verb
diñgo
- third-person singular past of dingti
- third-person plural past of dingti
Malay
Etymology
From English dingo, from Dharug dingu (“tame dingo”).
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): [di?o], [di??o]
- Rhymes: -?o, -o
Noun
dingo (Jawi spelling ?????, plural dingo-dingo, informal 1st possessive dingoku, impolite 2nd possessive dingomu, 3rd possessive dingonya)
- dingo (wild dog native to Australia)
Polish
Etymology
From English dingo, from Dharug dingu.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /?din.??/
Noun
dingo m anim (indeclinable)
- dingo
Further reading
- dingo in Wielki s?ownik j?zyka polskiego, Instytut J?zyka Polskiego PAN
- dingo in Polish dictionaries at PWN
Portuguese
Noun
dingo m (plural dingos)
- dingo (wild dog native to Australia)
Romanian
Etymology
From French dingo
Noun
dingo m (uncountable)
- dingo
Declension
Spanish
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /?din?o/, [?d???.?o]
Noun
dingo m (plural dingos)
- dingo
Swedish
Noun
dingo c
- a dingo
Declension
References
- dingo in Svenska Akademiens ordlista (SAOL)
dingo From the web:
- what dingoes eat
- what dingoes look like
- what dingo means
- what dingoes need to survive
- what do dingoes do
- what dingo like
- what dingolay means
- what dingoes eat and drink
jingo
English
Etymology
From the minced oath by jingo, which was used in a music hall song, written ca. 1878 by G. W. Hunt, that supported Britain's then belligerent attitude towards Russia on account of programs then taking place which were blamed on the Tzar. In this context, a euphemism for Jesus, influenced by the meaningless presto-jingo used by conjurors. A connection with the Basque jainko (“god”) has been suggested, but evidence is lacking.
Pronunciation
- (UK) IPA(key): /?d???.???/
- (US) IPA(key): /?d???.?o?/
- Rhymes: -?????
Noun
jingo (plural jingos or jingoes)
- One who supports policy favouring war.
- 1897 June 19, Carl Schurz, editorial: Armed or Unarmed Peace in Harper's Weekly, reprinted in 1913, Frederic Bancroft (editor), Speeches, Correspondence and Political Papers of Carl Schurz,
- The fact is that Mr. Roosevelt has always with perfect frankness confessed himself to be what is currently called a Jingo.
- 1908, Gilbert Keith Chesterton, Orthodoxy,
- He is the jingo of the universe; he will say, "My cosmos, right or wrong."
- 1897 June 19, Carl Schurz, editorial: Armed or Unarmed Peace in Harper's Weekly, reprinted in 1913, Frederic Bancroft (editor), Speeches, Correspondence and Political Papers of Carl Schurz,
Derived terms
- jingoism
- jingoist
- jingoistic
- jingoish
- jingoize
References
- Spare me all the outrage and "pseudo jingo stuff" about Iran's imprisonment of our troops, said Peter Hitchens in The Mail on Sunday. – Iran frees sailors, The Week, 7 April 2007, Issue 608, page 5.
Anagrams
- Gijón
Japanese
Romanization
jingo
- R?maji transcription of ???
jingo From the web:
- jingoism meaning
- jingoistic meaning
- what jingo mean
- what does jingo mean
- what is jingoism in us history
- what does jingostan meaning
- what does jingo mean in spanish
- what is jingoistic nationalism
you may also like
- dingo vs jingo
- pingo vs jingo
- jingko vs jingo
- lingo vs jingo
- nationalistic vs rationalistic
- nationalistic vs nonnationalistic
- nationalistic vs nationalisation
- nationalistic vs nationalistically
- nationalism vs nationalistic
- gobsmacked vs traumatised
- traumatised vs traumatise
- traumatised vs traumatises
- traumatised vs traumatized
- shaken vs traumatised
- badlyshaken vs traumatised
- hoodwinked vs bamboozled
- bamboozled vs gobsmacked
- bamboozled vs bamboozler
- terms vs bamboozled
- bamboozle vs bamboozled