nou - Wiktionary, the free dictionary


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nou (uncountable)

  1. Alternative form of noh (classical Japanese music drama)

From Dutch nauw, from Middle Dutch nauwe, from Proto-Germanic *hnawwaz.

nou (attributive noue, comparative nouer, superlative nouste)

  1. narrow

From Dutch nou, from Middle Dutch nou, variant of nu.

nou

  1. now

From Proto-Reefs-Santa Cruz *na u, from earlier *na kulu, from Proto-Oceanic *na kutu, from Proto-Malayo-Polynesian *kutu, from Proto-Austronesian *kuCu.

nou

  1. louse

From French nous.

nou

  1. we
  2. us

From Latin novem, from Proto-Indo-European *h₁néwn̥.

nou

  1. nine

From Latin novus. Compare Romanian nou.

nou m (feminine noauã, masculine plural noi, feminine plural noauã or nali/nale)

  1. new

Inherited from Old Catalan nou, from Latin novus, from Proto-Italic *nowos, from Proto-Indo-European *néwos. Compare Occitan nòu, French neuf, Spanish nuevo.

nou (feminine nova, masculine plural nous, feminine plural noves)

  1. new
    Antonym: vell
Catalan numbers (edit)
90
[a], [b] ←  8 9 10  → 
    Cardinal: nou
    Ordinal (Central): novè
    Ordinal (Valencian): nové
    Ordinal abbreviation (Central):
    Ordinal abbreviation (Valencian):
    Multiplier: nònuple
Catalan Wikipedia article on 9

Inherited from Latin novem (nine), from Proto-Indo-European *h₁néwn̥. Compare Occitan nòu.

nou m or f

  1. (cardinal number) nine

nou m (plural nous)

  1. nine

Inherited from Vulgar Latin *nŏcem, alteration of Latin nucem, ultimately from Proto-Indo-European *knew-. Compare Occitan nòtz, Spanish nuez, Portuguese noz.

nou f (plural nous)

  1. nut (a hard-shelled seed)
  2. walnut

nou

  1. inflection of noure:
    1. third-person singular present indicative
    2. second-person singular imperative

From Middle Dutch nou, a variant of nu, from Old Dutch *nu, from Proto-Germanic *nu.

Much more commonly used in the northern part of the Netherlands. In the Southern Netherlands and in Belgium, nu is used; nou may be used to affect a Northern Dutch accent.

nou

  1. (Northern) now; alternative form of nu
    Wat is er nou weer dan?What is it now then?
  2. (Northern) come on; modal particle indicating a certain degree of urgency or impatience on behalf of the speaker.
    Ga nou! Straks kom je nog te laat!Come on now! Or you'll be late!
  • Afrikaans: nou
  • Berbice Creole Dutch: nau
  • Negerhollands: noe, nou, nu
  • Skepi Creole Dutch: nou
  • Caribbean Javanese: na

nou

  1. (Northern) so, well; when pressing someone
    Nou, vertel me de waarheid dan!So tell me the truth then!
  2. (Northern) well; indicates a certain degree of doubt.
    Nou, ik weet het nog niet zo zeker.Well, I'm not so sure about that.
  3. (Northern) wow; indicates amazement or surprise.
    Nou, het waait toch wel hard hoor!Wow, it's still pretty windy!

From French nous (we), from Latin nōs (we).

nou (contracted form n)

  1. we
  2. us
  3. you pl

nou

  1. yours, for you (second person singular)
  • Applied to o-type possessions.

nou

  1. (transitive) to throw, pitch

(This etymology is missing or incomplete. Please add to it, or discuss it at the Etymology scriptorium. Particularly: “Probably from French "nous" or a clipping of Louisiana Creole "nouzòt" and/or French "nous autres".”)

nou

  1. Alternative form of nouzòt (we, us; our)

nou

  1. Nonstandard spelling of nóu.
  2. Nonstandard spelling of nǒu.
  3. Nonstandard spelling of nòu.
  • Transcriptions of Mandarin into the Latin script often do not distinguish between the critical tonal differences employed in the Mandarin language, using words such as this one without indication of tone.

From French nous.

nou

  1. we; us (first-person plural personal pronoun)

Mauritian Creole personal pronouns

singular plural
1st person mo
mwa (objective)
nou
2nd person to (informal), ou (formal)
twa (objective)
zot
3rd person li zot, bann-la

From Old English , from Proto-West Germanic *nū, from Proto-Germanic *nu.

nou

  1. now

Inherited from Latin novus, from Proto-Italic *nowos, from Proto-Indo-European *néwos.

nou m or n (feminine singular nouă, plural noi)

  1. new
    Antonym: vechi

Nou is one of the adjectives which, following the French model, are often preposited to nouns instead of the usual Romanian postposition. This is typical of more literary language.

It is possible, but not necessary, for this to introduce subtle distinctions in meaning. For example, o nouă carte could mean “a newly published book”, while o carte nouă would be “a newly bought or newly printed book”.

From Latin novus.

nou

  1. new

nou (not comparable)

  1. Alternative spelling of noo (now)

From Proto-Tai *ʰnuːᴬ (mouse; rat). Cognate with Thai หนู (nǔu), Northern Thai ᩉ᩠ᨶᩪ, Lao ໜູ (), ᦐᦴ (ṅuu), Tai Dam ꪘꪴ, Shan ၼူ (nǔu), Saek หนู่.

nou (Sawndip forms or 𮮬 or 𧉭, 1957–1982 spelling nou)

  1. mouse; rat
    Synonym: duznou