hy

See also: Hy and

Afrikaans

Etymology

From Dutch hij, from Middle Dutch hi, from Old Dutch hie, , from Proto-Germanic *hiz.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /ɦəi/, [ɦə̟i̯]

Pronoun

hy (object hom, possessive sy)

  1. third-person singular subject pronoun
    1. he (referring to a male person)
      Hy sien my nie.
      He can’t see me.
    2. it (referring to a non-personal noun)
      Ek het die boek gelees, maar hy is baie moeilik om te volg.
      I’ve read the book, but it is very difficult to follow.

Synonyms

See also


Cornish

Determiner

hy

  1. her (possessive determiner)

Noun

hy

  1. Aspirate mutation of ky.

Pronoun

hy

  1. she
  2. her

Middle English

Pronoun

hy

  1. Alternative form of heo

References

Pronoun

hy

  1. Alternative form of he

References


Swedish

Etymology

From Old Norse , from Proto-Germanic *hiwją, either from Proto-Indo-European *kew-, *ḱew- or from Proto-Indo-European *ḱey-, or a merger of the two. Compare English hue.

Noun

hy c (uncountable)

  1. skin, complexion

Declension

Declension of hy 
Uncountable
Indefinite Definite
Nominative hy hyn
Genitive hys hyns

Welsh

Alternative forms

Adjective

hy (feminine singular hy, plural hyfion, equative hyfed, comparative hyfach, superlative hyfaf)

  1. bold

Derived terms


West Frisian

Etymology

From Old Frisian , from Proto-Germanic *hiz, from Proto-Indo-European *ḱe.

Pronunciation

  • (Clay) IPA(key): /hɛi̯/
  • (Wood) IPA(key): /hi/

Pronoun

hy

  1. he (third-person singular masculine pronoun)

Usage notes

The accusative him is used roughly like "himself" and "itself" in English. In these cases, it is used after a verb when there is another object in the sentence. For example:

Dy partij stelt him op it stânpunt fan it federalisme.
This party puts itself on the standpoint of federalism.

In other reflexive cases, the reflexively marked pronoun himsels is used.

The clitic form er is used before the object of the sentence or after the verb, if there is one. It is never the first word of a sentence.

Doe't er in swolch naam
When he took a swallow

Especially in narrative, er is used in the past tense.

Inflection

Further reading

  • hy (I)”, in Wurdboek fan de Fryske taal (in Dutch), 2011

Westrobothnian

Etymology 1

From Old Norse hýða, derived from húð.

Verb

hy

  1. (transitive) to birch children

Etymology 2

Probably from Finnish.

Noun

hy f

  1. gnat, the smallest species of the mosquito genus: Ceratopogon pulicaris
Synonyms
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