different between germanic vs tiu

germanic

English

Etymology

germanium +? -ic

Adjective

germanic (not comparable)

  1. Of or containing germanium.
  2. Containing germanium with a valence of 4.

Anagrams

  • amercing, creaming

Romanian

Etymology

From French germanique, from Latin germanicus.

Adjective

germanic m or n (feminine singular germanic?, masculine plural germanici, feminine and neuter plural germanice)

  1. Germanic

Declension

germanic From the web:

  • what germanic tribes invaded rome
  • what germanic tribe settled in france
  • what germanic tribes defeated rome
  • what germanic tribes invaded england
  • what germanic tribes settled in england
  • what germanic tribe defeated the romans at the end
  • what germanic tribe conquered rome
  • what germanic tribes invaded britain


tiu

Chuukese

Numeral

tiu

  1. nine

Elfdalian

Etymology

From Old Norse tíu, from Proto-Germanic *tehun. Cognate with Swedish tio.

Numeral

tiu

  1. ten

Esperanto

Etymology

From ti- (demonstrative correlative prefix) +? -u (correlative suffix of individuals).

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /?tiu/
  • Hyphenation: ti?u
  • Rhymes: -iu
  • Audio:

Pronoun

tiu (plural tiuj, accusative singular tiun, accusative plural tiujn)

  1. who, what person, that one/person

Determiner

tiu (accusative singular tiun, plural tiuj, accusative plural tiujn)

  1. that

Usage notes

When combined with ?i, the adverbial particle of proximity, ?i tiu or tiu ?i means "this [one/person]".

Derived terms

  • tiutempa

Finnish

Etymology

Borrowed from Swedish tjog.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /?tiu?/, [?t?iu?]
  • Rhymes: -iu
  • Syllabification: tiu

Noun

tiu

  1. score (quantity of twenty pieces, used mainly of eggs)

Declension

In plural, only nominative case is used.

Interjection

tiu

  1. Imitation of a small bird's sound.

See also

  • tusina

Anagrams

  • itu, uit

Kabuverdianu

Etymology

From Portuguese tio.

Noun

tiu

  1. uncle

tiu From the web:

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