samin

Cebuano

Etymology

Compare Tagalog salamin.

Noun

samin

  1. a mirror; a smooth surface, usually made of glass with reflective material painted on the underside, that reflects light so as to give an image of what is in front of it
  2. (mahjong) he white dragon tile

Verb

samin

  1. to look into a mirror
  2. to be mirrored
  3. to ponder; to reflect

Gothic

Romanization

samin

  1. Romanization of πƒπŒ°πŒΌπŒΉπŒ½

Scots

Alternative forms

  • samyn, samyne, samyng, samen, sammyn, sammyne, sammyning

Etymology

From Middle English samenn, samen, from Old English samen (β€œtogether”), from Proto-Germanic *samana (β€œtogether”), from Proto-Indo-European *sem- (β€œsame, like, together”). Cognate with Old Frisian samin (β€œtogether”), Dutch samen (β€œtogether”), German zusammen (β€œtogether”), Icelandic saman (β€œtogether”). More at same.

Adverb

samin

  1. Together; in association or in company with.
  2. Toward one another.
  3. Mutually; each other.

Derived terms

  • all the samyn
  • alsammyn
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