nep
From Middle English neppe, nepe, nepte, nept, from Old English nepte, nefte, from Latin nepeta. Compare Dutch neppe, nippe (“catnip”). Doublet of nepeta.
nep (usually uncountable, plural neps)
Perhaps a variant of nap for knap, from Middle English knep, kneppe, knappe, a conflation of Old English cnep, cnæp, cnæpp (“top, knop, summit”) and Old Norse knappr (“knob”), both from Proto-Germanic *knappaz, *knappô (“knob”), from Proto-Indo-European *gnebʰ- (“to press, tighten”), from Proto-Indo-European *gen- (“to pinch, squeeze, bend, press together, ball”). Compare also Old Norse hnappr (“button”). Related to knob.
nep (plural neps)
nep (third-person singular simple present neps, present participle nepping, simple past and past participle nepped)
Short for nepotist.
nep (plural neps)
From ne (“interrogatory root”) + p (“thing”). See nekon, nen.
nep (Kana spelling ネㇷ゚)
Less common in spoken language than hemanta.
From German Nepp. Originally Bargoens.
nep m (uncountable)
nep (comparative nepper, superlative nepst)
Some Dutch speakers may consider attributive use of this adjective informal. Thus, the inflected form neppe is not very commonly used in more formal language. In such language, the word is used more often in compounds formed by prefixing with nep-. The predicative and partitive forms are used normally.
Declension of nep | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
uninflected | nep | |||
inflected | neppe | |||
comparative | nepper | |||
positive | comparative | superlative | ||
predicative/adverbial | nep | nepper | het nepst het nepste | |
indefinite | m./f. sing. | neppe | neppere | nepste |
n. sing. | nep | nepper | nepste | |
plural | neppe | neppere | nepste | |
definite | neppe | neppere | nepste | |
partitive | neps | neppers | — |
nep
nēp