na-

See also: Appendix:Variations of "na"

Azerbaijani

Other scripts
Cyrillic на-
Arabic ناـ

Etymology

Borrowed from Persian ناـ (nâ-).

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): [nɑ]

Prefix

na- (rarely productive)

  1. un-, non-, in-
    Synonym: qeyri-
    na- + ‎tamam (complete) → ‎natamam (incomplete)
  2. -less
    Synonym: -siz
    na- + ‎ümid (hope) → ‎naümid (hopeless)

Derived terms

Big Nambas

Alternative forms

Etymology

From Proto-Oceanic *na.

Article

na-

  1. The noun article. Added to nouns and verb stems to affirm nominal use. Has an element of definiteness. Also used in derivation.

Derived terms

Big Nambas terms prefixed with na-

References

Chichewa

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /ná/

Prefix

ná-

  1. Prefixed to a traditional Chewa clan name to denote a woman belonging to that clan.

Curripaco

Prefix

na-

  1. third person plural agent marker

References

  • Swintha Danielsen, Tania Granadillo, Agreement in two Arawak languages, in The Typology of Semantic Alignment (edited by Mark Donohue, Søren Wichmann) (2008, →ISBN, page 398

Czech

Etymology

Inherited from Old Czech na-, from Proto-Slavic *na-. Doublet of ná-. From the preposition na.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): [na ]

Prefix

na-

  1. a prefix, often used where English would use a phrasal verb with on
  2. (as an imperfective verb) (often used with se) intensification: added to mean a lot
    na- + ‎představovat se (present onself) → ‎napředstavovat se (present oneself many times)

Derived terms

Czech terms prefixed with na-

Further reading

  • na- in Slovník afixů užívaných v češtině, 2017

Dutch

Etymology

Derived from the preposition na

Pronunciation

  • Audio:(file)

Prefix

na-

  1. after

Antonyms

voor-

Derived terms

Dutch terms prefixed with na-

Gunwinggu

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /na-/

Prefix

na-

  1. male prefix added onto human words.

References

  • Steven and Narelle Etherington, Kunwinjku Kunwok: A Short Introduction to Kunwinjku Language and Society (third edition, 1998)

Hawaiian

Prefix

na-

  1. alternative form of nā-

Derived terms

Hawaiian terms prefixed with na-

Further reading

Ilocano

Prefix

na- (Kur-itan spelling )

  1. forms adjectives indicating a quality
    na- + ‎dalus (cleanliness) → ‎nadalus (clean)

Derived terms

Kambera

Pronoun

na-

  1. third person singular nominative proclitic

See also

Kambera pronominal clitics
nominative genitive accusative dative
singular first person ku- -nggu -ka -ngga
second person mu- (u-) -mu -kau -nggau
third person na- -na -ya -nya
plural first
person
inclusive ta- -nda -ta -nda
exclusive ma- -ma -kama -nggama
second person mi- (i-) -mi -kami (-kai) -nggami (-nggai)
third person da- -da -ha -nja

Makasar

Pronunciation

Pronoun

na- (nominative proclitic, Lontara spelling )

  1. he, she, it, they (third person singular and plural)

See also

Makasar free and bound pronouns
independent absolutive nominative possessive
1st sg / 1st pl exclusive nakke -a' ku- -ku
1st pl exclusive (archaic) kambe -kang ki- -mang
1st pl inclusive / 2nd sg polite katte -ki' ki- -ta
2nd sg / pl familiar kau -ko nu- -nu
3rd sg / pl ia -i na- -na

Mwotlap

Etymology

From Proto-Torres-Banks *na, from Proto-Oceanic *na (noun article).

Article

na-

  1. a, the (singular article for common nouns)

Morphophonology

  • When followed by a noun starting with a vowel, the vowel of na- is elided:
na- +‎ ēm̄nēm̄ (house)
  • When followed by a noun starting with a single consonant, na- normally changes its vowel to a clone of the vowel in the next syllable:
na- +‎ (water)
na- +‎ vinhenivinhe (bamboo)
  • When followed by a noun starting with two underlying consonants, na- normally remains unchanged:
na- +‎ l(ō)qōvēnnalqōvēn (woman)

Semantics

  • General determiner; does not encode definiteness.
  • Forms the determinate form of most nouns.
  • For [+human] referents, the number value is singular, contrasting with dual yoge, trial tēlge, plural ige.
nalqōvēn (a woman)
— opp. yoge lōqōvēn (two women), tēlge lōqōvēn (three women), ige lōqōvēn (women).
  • For [-human] referents, the number value of the article is unspecified.
(water)
nēm̄ (a house, houses; the house, the houses)

References

Etymology 1

Prefix

na-

  1. Marks the continuative aspect, describing actions that take place over an indefinite time and move without a fixed direction or goal. Can also be translated as 'around about, here and there,' and is sometimes referred to as an atelic prefix.
    na- + ‎-nish (work) → ‎naalnish (have a job, work)
Usage notes
  • This prefix is realized as ni- before the fourth-person prefix ji-, the distributive plural prefix da-, and all of the si- perfective prefixes except s/z-: nijiné (someone is playing), not *najiné, and nidajiné (some people are playing), not *nadajiné.

See also

Navajo terms prefixed with na- (disjunct)

Etymology 2

Prefix

na-

  1. Marks the diversitative aspect on certain verbs, indicating action taking place in multiple places ("here and there") without taking place over a specific period of time

Etymology 3

Prefix

na-

Etymology 4

Prefix

na-

See also

References

  • Young, Robert W & William Morgan, Sr. The Navajo Language. A Grammar and Colloquial Dictionary. University of New Mexico Press. Albuquerque, NM: 1987.

Old English

Etymology

From .

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /nɑː/

Prefix

nā-

  1. Denotes absence or lack

See also

Old Polish

Etymology

  • Inherited from Proto-Slavic *na-.

    Pronunciation

    • IPA(key): (10th–15th CE) /na(ː)/
    • IPA(key): (15th CE) /na/, /nɒ/

    Prefix

    na-

    1. added to verbs to make them perfective
      na- + ‎pisać → ‎napisać
    2. added to verbs to mean onto
      na- + ‎łożyć → ‎nałożyć
    3. added to verbs to with various meanings
      na- + ‎mówić → ‎namówić

    Derived terms

    Descendants

    • Polish: na-

    Polish

    Etymology

  • Inherited from Old Polish na-. Doublet of ana-.

    Pronunciation

    • IPA(key): /na/
    • Audio:(file)
    • Rhymes: -a
    • Syllabification: [please specify syllabification manually]

    Prefix

    na-

    1. added to verbs to make them perfective
      na- + ‎pisać → ‎napisać
    2. added to verbs to mean onto
      na- + ‎łożyć → ‎nałożyć
    3. added to verbs to with various meanings
      na- + ‎mówić → ‎namówić

    Derived terms

    Polish terms prefixed with na-

    Slovene

    Etymology

    From Proto-Slavic *na-. Prefixed form of the preposition na.

    Pronunciation

    • IPA(key): /na-/

    Prefix

    na-

    1. Forms perfective verbs with the following meanings:
      1. (no change in meaning)
        na- + ‎pisáti (to write) → ‎napisáti (to write)
      2. onto, into
        na- + ‎líti (to pour) → ‎nalíti (to pour in)
      3. a little, to begin to
        na- + ‎krivīti (to bend) → ‎nakrivīti (to bend a little)
        na- + ‎gníti (to rot) → ‎nagníti (to begin to rot)
      4. enough of, a sufficient amount of
        na- + ‎cepīti (to chop) → ‎nacepīti (to chop enough of)
      5. (reflexive) excessively, thoroughly
        na- + ‎píti (to drink) → ‎napíti (to drink one's fill, get drunk)

    Derived terms

    Slovene terms prefixed with na-

    Slovincian

    Etymology

  • Inherited from Proto-Slavic *na-.

    Pronunciation

    Prefix

    na-

    1. added to verbs to make them perfective, often meaning "to do X verb much or enough"
      na- + ‎ochac → ‎naochac

    Derived terms

    Swahili

    Prefix

    na-

    1. contraction of ni- + -a-
    2. contraction of ni- + -na-
      Synonym: nina-

    Tagalog

    Pronunciation

    • (Standard Tagalog)
      • IPA(key): /na/ [n̪ɐ] (complete aspect prefix)
      • IPA(key): /ˈna/ [ˈn̪aː] (progressive aspect prefix)
    • Syllabification: na-

    Prefix

    na- (Baybayin spelling )

    1. used to form complete aspects of verbs prefixed with ma-

    Prefix

    ná- (Baybayin spelling )

    1. (dialectal) used to form progressive aspects of verbs prefixed with um- or infixed with -um-

    Usage notes

    • The dialectal prefix, when written, is generally a source of confusion and mockery for the majority of Tagalog speakers, but the two actually differ by pronunciation. The na-, where it indicates a perfective aspect, is pronounced without stress, while the na- prefix, where it indicates a progressive aspect in some dialects, is pronounced with stress.
      Nakain siya ng isda.
      He/She happened to be eaten by the fish.
      kain siya ng isda.
      He/She is eating fish.

    Derived terms

    See also

    Anagrams

    Ternate

    Pronoun

    na-

    1. first-person plural inclusive possessive prefix, our
      Synonym: nga-
    2. second-person plural possessive prefix, your
      Synonym: nia-
    3. (human) third-person plural possessive prefix, their
      Synonym: nga-

    See also

    Ternate personal pronouns
    independent subject proclitic possessive
    informal formal
    singular 1st person ngori fangarem, fajaruf to ri
    2nd person ngana ngoni, jou ngoni no ni
    3rd person unam, minaf om, mof, inh im, mif, manh
    plural 1st person inclusive ngone fo na, nga
    1st person exclusive ngomi fangare ngomim, fajaru ngomif,
    fara ngomi1
    mi mi, mia
    2nd person ngoni ni na, nia
    3rd person anah, enanh ih, nh, yoh, †, yanh, † nah, ngah, manh
    • unmarked pronouns are gender non-specific
    • m - masculine, f - feminine, h - human, nh - non-human
    • 1 - for mixed-gender groups
    • † - archaic

    References

    • Rika Hayami-Allen (2001), A descriptive study of the language of Ternate, the northern Moluccas, Indonesia, University of Pittsburgh

    Tumbuka

    Etymology

    From ni- (I) +‎ -a- (recent perfect infix). Compare with Chichewa nda-

    Prefix

    na-

    1. 1st person singular subject concord in the recent past tense.

    See also

    Turkish

    Etymology

    Inherited from Ottoman Turkish ناـ (nâ-), from Persian ناـ (nâ-).

    Prefix

    na- (rarely productive)

    1. un-, non-, in-
      Synonym: gayri-
      na- + ‎tamam (complete) → ‎natamam (incomplete)
    2. -less
      Synonym: -siz
      na- + ‎ümit (hope) → ‎naümit (hopeless)

    Derived terms

    Turkish terms prefixed with na-

    West Makian

    Etymology 1

    Cognate with Ternate na- (our).

    Pronunciation

    • IPA(key): /n̪a/

    Pronoun

    na-

    1. first-person plural inclusive possessive prefix, our
    Usage notes

    The possessive prefix na- is subject to West Makian vowel harmony, and as such may surface as ne-, ni-, or no-.

    Alternative forms

    See also

    West Makian personal pronouns
    independent possessive prefix
    1st person singular de ti
    2nd person singular ni ni
    3rd person singular me mVan., dVinan.
    1st person plural inclusive ene nV
    exclusive imi mi
    2nd person plural ini fi
    3rd person plural eme di

    V indicates the expected assimilated vowel of the following noun,
    following standard West Makian vowel harmony.

    Etymology 2

    Pronunciation

    Pronoun

    na-

    1. second-person singular clitic, you
      nocoyou see
    Usage notes

    The prefix na- follows West Makian vowel harmony, and as such may surface as ne-, ni-, no-, or nu-.

    Alternative forms

    References

    • Clemens Voorhoeve (1982), The Makian languages and their neighbours[1], Pacific linguistics

    Xhosa

    Preposition

    na-

    1. with, in company of
    2. (with subject concord) to have

    Conjunction

    na-

    1. and (joining individual words)

    Zulu

    Pronunciation

    • IPA(key): /nʱa/

    Preposition

    na-

    1. with, in company of
    2. (with subject concord) to have

    Usage notes

    The meaning "have" can be analysed more literally as "to be with". In the negative, a- is prefixed to the subject concord, and the initial vowel of the noun prefix is dropped:

    • Nginekati.I have a cat.
    • Anginakati.I don't have a cat.

    Conjunction

    na-

    1. and (joining individual words)
      Synonym: futhi
    2. also, too
      Synonym: futhi
    3. even (implying an extreme example)

    References