-men

See also: Appendix:Variations of "men"

English

Etymology

From men, plural of man.

Suffix

-men

  1. plural of -man
    horsemen, sportsmen; lawmen, newsmen; freemen, icemen, supermen; Scotsmen, Chinamen

Basque

Etymology

(This etymology is missing or incomplete. Please add to it, or discuss it at the Etymology scriptorium.)

Suffix

-men

  1. sense, capacity
    aditu (to understand) + -menadimen (intelligence)
  2. Forming nouns expressing an action
    abiatu (to start, begin) + -menabiamen (beginning)

Derived terms

Basque terms suffixed with -men

Further reading

  • -men” in Labayru Hiztegia

Latin

Etymology

From Proto-Italic *-men, from Proto-Indo-European *-mn̥.

Pronunciation

Suffix

-men n (genitive -minis); third declension

  1. forms neuter nouns of the third declension

Usage notes

Nouns ending in the suffix -men are often derived from verbs. Derivatives of first-conjugation verbs end in -āmen, such as lībrāmen from lībrō (I balance, poise) (active present infinitive lībrāre, present stem lībrā-). Derivatives of fourth-conjugation verbs end in -īmen. Derivatives of second- and third-conjugation verbs show various patterns depending on the stem involved. Derivatives of nouns or adjectives also show some variation: some end in -āmen (such as linteāmen, oleāmen, pinguāmen from linteum, oleum, pinguis) while others end in -ūmen (such as albūmen, caldūmen from albus, caldus).

Compare also the formation and use of nouns ending in -mentum; for some nouns ending in -men, there is a corresponding noun ending in -mentum with a similar meaning, such as vēlāmen (covering) and vēlāmentum (covering).

Declension

Third-declension noun (neuter, imparisyllabic non-i-stem).

Case Singular Plural
Nominative -men -mina
Genitive -minis -minum
Dative -minī -minibus
Accusative -men -mina
Ablative -mine -minibus
Vocative -men -mina

Derived terms

Latin terms suffixed with -men

Descendants

  • Catalan: -am, -im, -um
  • Italian: -ame, -ime, -ume
  • Romanian: -ime
  • Spanish: -ambre, -umbre

Occitan

Suffix

-men

  1. Alternative form of -ment

Old Occitan

Examples

lonc (long)
feminine lonja
adverb lonjamen (for a long time).

Alternative forms

Etymology

From Late Latin -mente.

Suffix

-men

  1. Used to form adverbs, most of the time equivalent to the English -wise, -ly.


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