bin

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Translingual

Symbol

bin

  1. (international standards) ISO 639-2 & ISO 639-3 language code for Edo.

English

A rubbish bin.

Pronunciation

Etymology 1

From Middle English bynne, from Old English binne (crib, manger), from Proto-West Germanic *binnu, *binnā, from Gaulish benna (four-wheeled cart; caisson) (compare Old Irish buinne, Welsh ben (cart), Old Breton benn (caisson)). Cognate with West Frisian bin (wicker basket), Middle Dutch benne (basket), whence modern Dutch ben (wicker basket), German Benne (wheelbarrow).

Noun

bin (plural bins)

  1. A box, frame, crib, or enclosed place, used as a storage container.
    Synonyms: container, receptacle
    a corn bin
    a wine bin
    a coal bin
  2. A container for rubbish or waste.
    Synonyms: (British) dustbin, (British, Australian) rubbish bin, (US) garbage can, trash can; see also Thesaurus:waste bin
    a rubbish bin
    a wastepaper bin
    an ashes bin
    • 2013 August 10, Lexington, “Keeping the mighty honest”, in The Economist, volume 408, number 8848:
      British journalists shun complete respectability, feeling a duty to be ready to savage the mighty, or rummage through their bins. Elsewhere in Europe, government contracts and subsidies ensure that press barons will only defy the mighty so far.
  3. (statistics) Any of the discrete intervals in a histogram, etc
  4. Any of the fixed-size chunks into which airspace is divided for the purposes of radar.
  5. (MLE, MTE, slang, uncommon) Jail or prison.
    Synonyms: see Thesaurus:jail
    • 2018 October 22, “Subs”, Slipz of Hoxton (lyrics)‎:
      Free up my G's locked in the bin
      Jail house comin' like subs
      one comes out then one goes in
  6. (slang) Short for loony bin (lunatic asylum).
    • 1973, New Scientist, volume 58, number 852, page 822:
      At the moment, and in "an emergency", you or I could be sent to the bin, willy-nilly, on the say-so of a single doctor (who may never have seen us before, and need have no particular experience of mental illness), so long as the application is supported by one of our relatives, or by a "social worker".
  7. (video post-production) A digital file folder for organising media in a non-linear editing program.
Derived terms
Translations
The translations below need to be checked and inserted above into the appropriate translation tables. See instructions at Wiktionary:Entry layout § Translations.

Verb

bin (third-person singular simple present bins, present participle binning, simple past and past participle binned)

  1. (chiefly British, informal) To dispose of (something) by putting it into a bin, or as if putting it into a bin.
    Synonyms: chuck, chuck away, discard, dump; see also Thesaurus:junk
    • 2008, Tom Holt, Falling Sideways, Orbit books,, →ISBN, page 28:
      He put the bank statement in the shoebox marked "Bank Statements" and binned the rest.
  2. (British, informal) To throw away, reject, give up.
    • 2002, Christopher Harvie, Scotland: A Short History, Oxford University Press, →ISBN, page 59:
      This splendid eloquence was promptly binned by the pope, []
    • 2005, Ian Oliver, War and peace in the Balkans: the diplomacy of conflict in the former Yugoslavia, I.B. Tauris, →ISBN, page 238:
      The CC [Co-ordinating Centre] had long since binned the idea of catching the regular shuttle service, []
    • 2021 September 22, Howard Johnston, “NR: stop firefighting and plan for long-term progress”, in RAIL, number 940, page 11:
      NR also wants more effort made to bin out-of-date 1970s technology, but only replacing it with equipment that meets customer needs, rather than high-tech kit just for the sake of it.
  3. (statistics) To convert continuous data into discrete groups.
  4. (transitive) To place into a bin for storage.
    to bin wine
Translations

Etymology 2

From Arabic بِن (bin, son).

Noun

bin

  1. (in Arabic names) son of; equivalent to Hebrew בן (ben).

Etymology 3

Contraction of being.

Contraction

bin

  1. (text messaging) Contraction of being.

Etymology 4

Contraction of been.

Verb

bin

  1. (obsolete, dialectal and text messaging) Alternative form of been
    • 1669, Christopher Merrett, letter to Thomas Browne:
      Many of the lupus piscis I have seen, and have bin informed by the king's fishmonger they are taken on our coast []

Etymology 5

Clipping of binary.

Noun

bin (countable and uncountable, plural bins)

  1. (computing) Clipping of binary.

Anagrams

Biak

Noun

bin

  1. woman
    • : FAFYAR BEKUR KORBEN MA BIN YOMGA : "THE STORY ABOUT DRAGON AND THE YOMGA WOMAN"
      Korben ine fyair bin berande ido bebaraprapen ro yaf narewara bo bebur mumra si. : This dragon usually watched the women who usually went landward and roasted (food) along the gardens and went home seaward.

Dalmatian

Etymology

From Latin bene. Compare Romanian bine, Italian bene, Spanish bien, French bien.

Adverb

bin

  1. well
    Ju sai bin.I am well.

Noun

bin

  1. good

Egyptian

Romanization

bin

  1. Manuel de Codage transliteration of bjn.

French

Pronunciation

Adverb

bin

  1. Alternative spelling of bien

German

Etymology

From Middle High German, from Old High German bim (am), from Proto-Germanic *biumi (first-person singular present active indicative of Proto-Germanic *beuną (to be)), from Proto-Indo-European *bʰew- (to be, become, appear). Cognate with Dutch ben (am), Old English bēom (am). More at be.

German bin and Dutch ben have two sources:

Pronunciation

Verb

bin

  1. first-person singular present of sein

References

  1. ^ Friedrich Kluge (1989) “bin”, in Elmar Seebold, editor, Etymologisches Wörterbuch der deutschen Sprache [Etymological Dictionary of the German Language] (in German), 22nd edition, Berlin: Walter de Gruyter, →ISBN

Guinea-Bissau Creole

Etymology

From Portuguese vir. Cognate with Kabuverdianu ben.

Verb

bin

  1. to come

Indonesian

Etymology

From Malay bin, from Classical Malay bin, from Arabic بِن (bin, son).

Noun

bin (first-person possessive binku, second-person possessive binmu, third-person possessive binnya)

  1. son (of)

Japanese

Romanization

bin

  1. Rōmaji transcription of びん

Krio

Etymology

From English been.

Pronunciation

IPA(key): /bìn/

Particle

bìn

  1. Marks simple past tense

Malay

Etymology

From Classical Malay bin, from Arabic بِن (bin, son). Cognate to Indonesian bin.

Noun

bin

  1. (name custom) son (of)
    Amir bin Aiman
    Amir bin Aiman

Maltese

Etymology

From Arabic بِن (bin). One of very few words in which a stressed final short vowel is not indicated by doubling the following consonant (another example being lil). This is because there is no gemination before suffixes (compare e.g. binha (her son)).

Pronunciation

Noun

bin

  1. construct form of iben
    Bin il-BniedemSon of Man

Usage notes

  • As a tendency, this form is used before the definite article and before names, while unchanged iben is used otherwise.

Mandarin

Romanization

bin

  1. Nonstandard spelling of bīn.
  2. Nonstandard spelling of bǐn.
  3. Nonstandard spelling of bìn.

Usage notes

  • 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.

North Frisian

Etymology

From Old Frisian binda, which derives from Proto-Germanic *bindaną.

Verb

bin

  1. (Heligoland) to bind

Northern Kurdish

Etymology

From Proto-Iranian *buHnáh (base, foundation), from Proto-Indo-Iranian *bʰudʰnás (bottom, ground), from a reshaping of Proto-Indo-European *bʰudʰ(m̥)nés, genitive singular of *bʰudʰmḗn (bottom). Related to Ossetian бын (byn), Persian بن (bon).

Pronunciation

Noun

bin m (Arabic spelling بن)

  1. foundation, bottom; base
    Synonym: verenk
    Antonyms: qehf, ser

Declension

Preposition

bin (Arabic spelling بن)

  1. below, under, beneath
    Antonym: ser

References

  • Chyet, Michael L. (2020) “bin I”, in Ferhenga Birûskî: Kurmanji–English Dictionary (Language Series; 1), volume 1, London: Transnational Press, page 81
  • Chyet, Michael L. (2020) “bin II”, in Ferhenga Birûskî: Kurmanji–English Dictionary (Language Series; 1), volume 1, London: Transnational Press, page 81

Papiamentu

Alternative forms

Etymology

From Spanish venir and Kabuverdianu ben.

Verb

bin

  1. to come

Pennsylvania German

Etymology

Compare German bin, Dutch ben.

Pronunciation

Verb

bin

  1. first-person singular present indicative of sei

Swahili

Etymology

Borrowed from Arabic بِن (bin, son).

Pronunciation

Noun

bin (n class, plural bin)

  1. son of
    Khamis bin AbdallahKhamis the son of Abdallah

Swedish

Pronunciation

Noun

bin

  1. indefinite plural of bi

Taivoan

Noun

bin

  1. brother

Talysh

Verb

bin

  1. present stem of vinde

Tok Pisin

Etymology 1

From English been.

Particle

bin

  1. Marks the simple past tense.
See also

Tok Pisin tense and aspect markers:

Etymology 2

From English bean.

Noun

bin

  1. bean, beans

Turkish

Turkish numbers (edit)
 ←  100  ←  900 1,000
100
    Cardinal: bin
    Ordinal: bininci
    Distributive: biner

Pronunciation

Etymology 1

Inherited from Ottoman Turkish بیك (biŋ, thousand), from Proto-Turkic *bïŋ (thousand). Cognate with Old Turkic 𐰉𐰃𐰭 (b¹iŋ /⁠bïŋ⁠/), 𐰋𐰃𐰭 (b²iŋ /⁠biŋ⁠/), Old Uyghur 𐽹𐽶𐽺𐽷 (mïŋ, thousand), Bashkir мең (meñ, thousand), Tatar мең (meñ, thousand) and Mongolian мянган (mjangan, thousand) a Turkic borrowing.

Noun

bin

  1. thousand
Declension
Inflection
Nominative bin
Definite accusative bini
Singular Plural
Nominative bin binler
Definite accusative bini binleri
Dative bine binlere
Locative binde binlerde
Ablative binden binlerden
Genitive binin binlerin
Possessive forms
Nominative
Singular Plural
1st singular binim binlerim
2nd singular binin binlerin
3rd singular bini binleri
1st plural binimiz binlerimiz
2nd plural bininiz binleriniz
3rd plural binleri binleri
Definite accusative
Singular Plural
1st singular binimi binlerimi
2nd singular binini binlerini
3rd singular binini binlerini
1st plural binimizi binlerimizi
2nd plural bininizi binlerinizi
3rd plural binlerini binlerini
Dative
Singular Plural
1st singular binime binlerime
2nd singular binine binlerine
3rd singular binine binlerine
1st plural binimize binlerimize
2nd plural bininize binlerinize
3rd plural binlerine binlerine
Locative
Singular Plural
1st singular binimde binlerimde
2nd singular bininde binlerinde
3rd singular bininde binlerinde
1st plural binimizde binlerimizde
2nd plural bininizde binlerinizde
3rd plural binlerinde binlerinde
Ablative
Singular Plural
1st singular binimden binlerimden
2nd singular bininden binlerinden
3rd singular bininden binlerinden
1st plural binimizden binlerimizden
2nd plural bininizden binlerinizden
3rd plural binlerinden binlerinden
Genitive
Singular Plural
1st singular binimin binlerimin
2nd singular bininin binlerinin
3rd singular bininin binlerinin
1st plural binimizin binlerimizin
2nd plural bininizin binlerinizin
3rd plural binlerinin binlerinin
Derived terms
  • binbir (very many, literally a thousand and one)
  • binlerce (thousands of)

Etymology 2

Verb

bin

  1. second-person singular imperative of binmek

Welsh

Etymology 1

Borrowed from English bin.

Pronunciation

Noun

bin m (plural biniau or bins)

  1. bin, trashcan

Mutation

Mutated forms of bin
radical soft nasal aspirate
bin fin min unchanged

Note: Certain mutated forms of some words can never occur in standard Welsh.
All possible mutated forms are displayed for convenience.

Etymology 2

Mutated form of pin (pine trees).

Pronunciation

Noun

bin

  1. Soft mutation of pin (pine trees).

Mutation

Mutated forms of pin
radical soft nasal aspirate
pin bin mhin phin

Note: Certain mutated forms of some words can never occur in standard Welsh.
All possible mutated forms are displayed for convenience.

Yola

Etymology

Originated 1250–1300 from Middle English beynge.

Pronunciation

Verb

bin

  1. being
    • 1927, “PAUDEEN FOUGHLAAN'S WEDDEEN”, in THE ANCIENT DIALECT OF THE BARONIES OF FORTH AND BARGY, COUNTY WEXFORD, page 133, line 3:
      Shu bin vrem Vorth, an hay vrem Bargee,
      She being from Forth and he from Bargy;

References

  • Kathleen A. Browne (1927) The Journal of the Royal Society of Antiquaries of Ireland Sixth Series, Vol.17 No.2, Royal Society of Antiquaries of Ireland, page 133

Zoogocho Zapotec

Etymology

Borrowed from Spanish vena, from Latin vēna.

Noun

bin

  1. vein

References

  • Long C., Rebecca, Cruz M., Sofronio (2000) Diccionario zapoteco de San Bartolomé Zoogocho, Oaxaca (Serie de vocabularios y diccionarios indígenas “Mariano Silva y Aceves”; 38)‎ (in Spanish), second electronic edition, Coyoacán, D.F.: Instituto Lingüístico de Verano, A.C., page 16