-ien
Breton
Etymology
From Old Breton -ion, -on, Proto-Brythonic *-onos, *-onā. Cognate to Welsh -ion, Cornish -yon.
Suffix
-ien
Derived terms
French
Etymology
Inherited from Middle French -ien, from Old French -ien, from Latin -iānus, from -ānus. Cognate to French -ain and -an.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /jɛ̃/
Audio (file)
Suffix
-ien m (plural -iens, feminine -ienne)
- forms nouns denoting where something or someone is from; -ian
- Paris + -ien → Parisien (“a Parisian”)
- Californie + -ien → Californien (“a Californian”)
Suffix
-ien (feminine -ienne, masculine plural -iens, feminine plural -iennes)
- forms adjectives indicating relation to; -ian
- Paris + -ien → parisien (“Parisian”)
- Californie + -ien → californien (“Californian”)
- Vadim + -ien → vadimien (“of Roger Vadim Plemiannikov, French screenwriter, film director and producer”)
Usage notes
When the name's last syllable contains "e" or "è" followed by a single consonant, that vowel is normally raised to "é": e.g. barrésien, beethovénien, mussétien, turnérien, wagnérien, etc.
Derived terms
German
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /i̯ən/, [i.ən], [jən]
Audio (file)
Etymology 1
From Middle High German -ie, -je, from Latin -ia (feminine singular). Nouns with this Latinate suffix were originally strong (i.e. invariable) feminines, but inflected forms in -ien arose when the distinction between strong and weak feminines collapsed in later Middle High German. These were then treated by analogy with local names like Böhmen, Franken, Sachsen etc. (all originally dative plural of a tribe name).
Suffix
-ien n
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
- Used to form the plurals of some neuter nouns of Latin descent whose original plural ends in -ia.
- Material + -ien → Materialien
- Prinzip + -ien → Prinzipien
- Reptil + -ien → Reptilien
Middle English
Etymology
Borrowed from Old French -ien, from Latin -iānus.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /-iˈɛːn/, /-i.ɛn/, /-i.ən/, /-jɛn/, /-jən/
Usage notes
Derived terms
References
- “-ien, suf.(1).”, in MED Online, Ann Arbor, Mich.: University of Michigan, 2007.
Middle French
Etymology
From Old French -ien, from Latin -iānus.
Old French
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