noa
English
Etymology
Borrowed from Maori.
Adjective
noa (not comparable)
- (New Zealand, among the Maori) Non-sacred; such that it must be kept separate from what is taboo.
- The power of the spoken word has meant that some dangerous things are not mentioned by their "real" names, but by noa terms, like gullfot (literally "golden foot") for "wolf", or tallbjörn (literally "pine bear"), granoxe (literally: "fir ox"), trädräv (literally: "tree fox") or granälg (literally: "fir elk") for "squirrel".[1]
References
- Bandle, O. (ed.) The Nordic Languages p. 291 Walter de Gruyter 2002 →ISBN
Hawaiian
Manx
Etymology
From Old Irish núa, from Proto-Celtic *nouyos (compare Welsh newydd, Breton nevez), from Proto-Indo-European *néwyos.
Mpotovoro
Etymology
Compare Big Nambas nauei.
Norwegian Nynorsk
Saterland Frisian
Etymology
From Old Frisian nā (eastern dialect) and nē (western dialect). Compare English no.
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