noh
English
Etymology
Borrowing from Japanese 能 (nō), from Middle Chinese 能 (nong, “talent, ability”).
Noun
noh (uncountable)
- A form of classical Japanese music drama.
Bouyei
Cebuano
Quotations
For quotations of use of this term, see Citations:noh.
Central Franconian
Etymology
From Old High German nāh, from Proto-Germanic *nēhw.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /nɔː/
Adjective
noh (masculine nohe, feminine noh, comparative noher or nöher or nöhter, superlative et' nohste or nöhste or nöhtste or nöchste or nächste)
Usage notes
- The comparation forms with -o- are Moselle Franconian, those with -ö- are Ripuarian.
- The superlatives nächste (Moselle Franconian) and nöchste (Ripuarian) are used in the sense of English next, though the more regular forms can have this sense as well.
Finnish
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /ˈnoh/, [ˈno̞h]
- Hyphenation: noh
Zhuang
Etymology
From Proto-Tai *n.mɤːᶜ (“meat, flesh”). Cognate with Thai เนื้อ (nʉ́ʉa), Northern Thai ᨶᩮᩥ᩶ᩬᩋ, Lao ເນຶ້ອ (nưa), Lü ᦵᦓᦲᧉ (noe2), Shan ၼိူဝ်ႉ (nô̰e), Ahom 𑜃𑜢𑜤𑜈𑜫 (nuew).
Pronunciation
- (Standard Zhuang) IPA(key): /no˧/
- Tone numbers: no6
- Hyphenation: noh
Derived terms
- mounoh
- nohbiz
- nohcing
- nohlap
- nohmbaiq
See also
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