From Proto-Germanic *duniz. <span class="searchmatch">dynr</span> m (genitive dyns, plural dynir) din, noise duna (“to boom”) dynja (“to boom”) Icelandic: dynur Faroese: dynur Norwegian:...
See also: dynja From Old Norse <span class="searchmatch">dynr</span>. IPA(key): /ˈtɪnja/ Rhymes: -ɪnja Dynja f (proper noun, genitive singular Dynju) a female given name from Old Norse...
participle done. dønn (colloquial) Used as an intensifier. From Old Norse <span class="searchmatch">dynr</span> m, from Proto-Germanic *duniz. dønn n (definite singular dønnet, indefinite...
See also: Appendix:Variations of "don" From Old Norse <span class="searchmatch">dynr</span>, from Proto-Germanic *duniz. døn n (singular definite dønnet, plural indefinite døn) (archaic)...
From Old Danish *thor, from Old Norse þórr (from Proto-Germanic *þunraz) + <span class="searchmatch">dynr</span> (“drone, noise, din, boom”). Compare Swedish tordön (“thunder”). IPA(key):...
descendants) → Middle Persian: [Book Pahlavi needed] (dynʾl /dēnār/) “<span class="searchmatch">dynr</span>”, in The Comprehensive Aramaic Lexicon Project, Cincinnati: Hebrew Union...
(dhúni, “sounding”), ध्वनति (dhvánati, “to make a noise, to roar”), Old Norse <span class="searchmatch">dynr</span>, Norwegian Nynorsk dynja, Swedish dån, dön. din (countable and uncountable...
デナリ (denari), デナリオン (denarion) Kannada: ದೀನಾರ (kn) (dīnāra) Khwarezmian: <span class="searchmatch">dynʾr</span> Latin: dēnārius (la) m Middle Persian: [Book Pahlavi needed] (dynʾl /dēnār/)...