woning
See also: wöning
English
Etymology 1
From Middle English woning, wuning, wunnunge, from Old English wunung (“act of dwelling, living, dwelling, habitation, inner room of a dwelling”), from Proto-Germanic *wunungō, equivalent to wone + -ing. Cognate with Scots wonnyng, wonyng, wonyn (“habitation, dwelling, shelter”), Dutch woning (“dwelling, house”), German Wohnung (“dwelling, apartment”), Swedish våning (“floor, apartment, flat”).
Noun
woning (plural wonings)
- (archaic) A place to live; a dwelling; a dwelling-place; an abode.
- 1852, James A. Sharp, A new gazetteer:
- Near it is a timbered house; an old inn close to the bridge is thought to be the "woning" of "Elynor Humming," the famous ale wife, whose "tunning" is celebrated by Hen. VII.'s poet laureate, Skelton.
- 1995, Walter Hilton, The Goad of Love:
- […] ordained as a place and a woning for the Holy Ghost, and as of Christ able and possible for to come to endless bliss.
- 1852, James A. Sharp, A new gazetteer:
Alternative forms
- wonning
Derived terms
- woning-place
- woning-stead
Etymology 2
From wone (“to dwell”).
Dutch
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /ˈʋoː.nɪŋ/
audio (file) - Hyphenation: wo‧ning
- Rhymes: -oːnɪŋ
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