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English

Most common English words: own « old « came « #107: men » come » without » make

Etymology

Old English menn

Pronunciation

Wikipedia has an article on: Men

Noun

men pl.

  1. Plural form of Man., either a male or any human
  2. collective meaning: (The) people, humanity

Quotations

Basque

Noun

men

  1. A command

Crimean Tatar

Pronoun

men (plural biz; possessive adjective menim)

  1. (personal) I (first-person singular)
Inflection
object me: maña
reflexive myself: özüm
possessive mine, my: menim

Danish

Conjunction

men

  1. but

Dutch

Etymology 1

Germanic, cognate with man

Pronoun

men

  1. (indefinite) One, they, (the) people; indefinite third person singular pronoun: Men zegt dat... (People say that...; It is said that...)
  2. All humanity, everyone; public opinion.
Related terms

Etymology 2

origin unclear

Verb form

root, singular - and imperative forms of mennen


Faroese

Pronunciation 1

Noun

men f.

  1. (rare, Mykines) The spinal cord
Declension
Singular Plural
Indefinite Definite Indefinite Definite
Nominative men menin menir menirnar
Accusative men menina menir menirnar
Dative men menini menum menunum
Genitive menar menarinnar mena menanna
Singular Plural
Indefinite Definite Indefinite Definite
Nominative men menin menar menarnar
Accusative men menina menar menarnar
Dative men menini menum menunum
Genitive menar menarinnar mena menanna
Synonyms

Pronunciation 2

Conjunction

men

  1. but

Italian

Adverb

men

  1. Apocopic form of meno.

Japanese

Noun

men (hiragana めん)

  1. 麺: A noodle
  2. 綿: The material cotton
  3. 面: A face

Mandarin

Suffix

men (Pinyin men5, traditional , simplified )

  1. Alternative spelling of -men.

Pronunciation

Pinyin

men (form of men0 or men5)

  1. 们: adjunct pronoun indicate plural
  2. 們: adjunct pronoun indicate plural

Pinyin syllable

men

  1. Nonstandard spelling of mēn.
  2. Nonstandard spelling of mén.
  3. Nonstandard spelling of měn.
  4. Nonstandard spelling of mèn.

Usage notes

English transcriptions of Chinese speech often fail to distinguish between the critical tonal differences employed in the Chinese language, using words such as this one without the appropriate indication of tone.


Norwegian

Etymology 1

Via Swedish and Danish men, from Old Norse meðan ("while").

Conjunction

men

  1. But, however; introducing a clause that contrasts with the preceding clause, sentence or common belief.
  2. though
  3. only
    Han er en fin kar, men han snakker litt for mye. – He is a nice guy, but he talks a bit too much.

Etymology 2

From Old Norse mein.

Noun

men

  1. damage; injury (also mén)
  2. permanent disability
  3. difficulty; drawback

Alternative spellings


Swedish

Etymology 1

Old Swedish men, from Middle Low German men, man ’but, only’, probably from Old Saxon niwan; possibly under the influence of Old Swedish men ’while, during’ (modern Swedish: medan, medans, mens).

Pronunciation

Conjunction

men

  1. But; introducing a clause that contrasts with the preceding clause, sentence or common belief.

Etymology 2

Like Icelandic and Norwegian mein, Old Saxon mĕn, Old English măn; cognate of Icelandic meinn ’which causes injury’ (adjective), Old English mĕn, mæ̆ne ’evil, deceptive’ (adjective), Lithuanian maĭnas ’change’ (noun), Proto-Slavic měna ’change’ (noun); from the Indo-European root mei- ’switch’ (verb).

Noun

Inflection for men Singular Plural
Neuter Indefinite Definite Indefinite Definite
Nominative men menet men menen
Genitive mens menets mens menens

men

  1. A handicap, long-time remnant of a physical or mental injury, which affects a person negatively.

Turkmen

Pronoun

men

  1. (personal) I

Declension

declension of men
singular plural
nominative men biz
accusative meni bizi
genitive meniň biziň
dative maňa bize
locative mende bizde
ablative menden bizden

 

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Google News Search: men,
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Mon Mar 8 03:44:23 2010
Can the Communist Party's greying old men keep pace with China's ...
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Can the Communist Party's greying old men keep pace with China's ...

Peter Foster

Fri, 05 Mar 2010 09:48:11 GM

caption id="attachment_​100028544" align="alignnon​e" width="460" caption="China'​s Premier Wen Jiabao speaks at the Great Hall of the People in Beijing (Photo: Reuters)"][/cap​tion] Just back from the Great Hall of the People after ...

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Fri Mar 5 17:54:43 2010
What would happen to men and women if they were sent to different planets, and lived separately?
Q. In the men's world, i think men would grab some beer; and have a good time wnjoying each other's company. Or maybe watch porn if they got too lonely. They would nevertheless make it through by themselves because men are not competitive with one another. Women/girls treat each other horribly. What would women do? And this is a serious question to all the women on Y/A.
Asked by Syed H - Fri Nov 7 13:52:59 2008 - - 14 Answers - 0 Comments

A. There have been a lot of science fiction novels that explore this very issue. All quite different than your view of what would happen. There are more women-only planets than men-only planets in these books, I think because women often wonder what life would be like if we didn't have any men around, while men can't imagine life without women. Some of the women-only planets/societies are peaceable and communal, with all women being "sisters" (see: Ammonite; The Female Man; "Houston, Houston Do You Read"; tales of Amazons; and "The Gate to Women's Country". All feature lesbianism. Others are chaotic and competitive (see "Y: The Last Man), the only one of these I've listed that was written by a man. As for the men's societies, there's "Ethan… [cont.]
Answered by Q - Fri Nov 7 14:21:59 2008

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Tue Mar 2 00:12:56 2010