-ien

See also: ien and iëŋ

Breton

Etymology

From Old Breton -ion, -on, Proto-Brythonic *-onos, *-onā. Cognate to Welsh -ion, Cornish -yon.

Suffix

-ien

  1. Noun pluralization suffix; sometimes with vocalic ablaut in the pluralized noun
    lenner (reader) + -ienlennerien (readers)
    mab (son) + -ienmibien (sons)

Derived terms

Breton terms suffixed with -ien

French

Etymology

From Middle French -ien, from Old French -ien, from Latin -iānus, from -ānus. Cognate to French -ain and -an.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /jɛ̃/
  • (file)

Suffix

-ien m (plural -iens, feminine -ienne)

  1. forms nouns denoting where something or someone is from; -ian
    Paris + -ienParisien (a Parisian)
    Californie + -ienCalifornien (a Californian)

Suffix

-ien (feminine -ienne, masculine plural -iens, feminine plural -iennes)

  1. forms adjectives indicating relation to; -ian
    Paris + -ienparisien (Parisian)
    Californie + -iencalifornien (Californian)
    Vadim + -ienvadimien (of Roger Vadim Plemiannikov, French screenwriter, film director and producer)

Derived terms

French terms suffixed with -ien

German

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /i̯ən/, [i.ən], [jən]
  • (file)

Etymology 1

From Middle High German -ie, -je, from Latin -ia (feminine singular).

Suffix

-ien n

  1. Used to form country names; -ia

Etymology 2

From Latin -ia (neuter plural). In some cases, analysable within German as a regular plural of an earlier form in -ium; e.g. Principium as an obsolete variant of Prinzip. The singular ending was sometimes lost, leaving -ien as a new, irregular plural suffix. In other cases, simply following the Latin i-declension (singular in -e, plural in -ia).

Suffix

-ien pl

  1. Used to form the plurals of some neuter nouns of Latin descent whose original plural ends in -ia.
    Material + -ienMaterialien
    Prinzip + -ienPrinzipien
    Reptil + -ienReptilien
Usage notes
  • Not all nouns whose Latin plural is -ia necessarily take this ending. Some take a regular plural in -e, or have both forms alongside (for example, Reptile).

Middle French

Etymology

From Old French -ien, from Latin -iānus.

Suffix

-ien (feminine equivalent -ienne)

  1. -ian
    patricien
    patrician

Old French

Examples

Surgien
Citeien

Etymology

From Latin -iānus, from -ānus.

Suffix

-ien (feminine equivalent -iene or -ienne)

  1. -ian

Descendants

  • Middle French: -ien
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