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du

From Wiktionary, the free dictionary

Abinomn

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Noun

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du

  1. name

Achang

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Pronunciation

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  • (Myanmar) /du˧/
  • (Lianghe) [to³¹]
  • (Longchuan) [to³¹]
  • (Luxi) [tua⁵¹]
  • (Xiandao) [to³¹]

Verb

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du

  1. to crawl

Further reading

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  • Inglis, Douglas; Sampu, Nasaw; Jaseng, Wilai; Jana, Thocha (2005), A preliminary Ngochang–Kachin–English Lexicon[4], Payap University, page 27

Äiwoo

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Determiner

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du

  1. all

References

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Albanian

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Verb

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du

  1. dialectal form of dua

Alemannic German

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Pronunciation

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Pronoun

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du

  1. thou, you

Declension

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Alemannic German personal pronouns
nominative accusative dative possessive m
singular 1st person ich, i mich, mi mir, mier, mer min, miin
2nd
person
familiar du dich, di dir, dier, der din, diin
polite Si Ine, Ene, -ne Ire
3rd
person
m er in, en im sin, siin
f si ire
n es, 's, -s im sin, siin
plural 1st person mir, mer üs, öis, ois, eus üse, öise, oise, euse
2nd person ir, ier öi, eu öie, eure
3rd person si ine, ene, -ne ire

Amanab

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Noun

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du

  1. a kind of bird

Ashkun

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Ashkun cardinal numbers
 <  1 2 3  > 
    Cardinal : du

Etymology

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    From Proto-Nuristani, from Proto-Indo-Iranian *dwáH, from Proto-Indo-European *dwóh₁.

    Numeral

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    du (Sanu)[1]

    1. two

    References

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    1. ^ Strand, Richard F. (2016), “d′u”, in Nûristânî Etymological Lexicon[1]

    Bambara

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    Pronunciation

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    Noun

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    du

    1. household

    References

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    Basque

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    Pronunciation

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    • IPA(key): /du/ [d̪u]
    • Audio:(file)
    • Rhymes: -u
    • Hyphenation: du

    Verb

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    du (masculine allocutive dik, feminine allocutive din)

    1. third-person singular, with third-person singular direct object, present indicative of izan (to have, transitive auxiliary)

    Bavarian

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    Etymology

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    Cognate with German du.

    Pronoun

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    du

    1. you (nominative, singular)

    See also

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    Bavarian personal pronouns
    nominative accusative dative
    stressed unstressed stressed unstressed stressed unstressed
    1st person singular i mi mia (mir) ma
    2nd person singular informal du di dia (dir) da
    formal Sie Eahna Eahna
    3rd person singular m er a eahm 'n eahm 'n
    n es, des 's des 's
    f se, de 's se 's ihr
    1st person plural mia (mir) ma uns uns
    2nd person plural , ihr enk, eich enk, eich
    3rd person plural se 's eahna eahna

    Breton

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    Etymology

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    From Proto-Brythonic *duβ, from Proto-Celtic *dubus, from Proto-Indo-European *dʰewbʰ-.

    Pronunciation

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    Adjective

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    du

    1. black
    2. swollen
    3. starved

    Mutation

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    Mutation of du
    unmutated soft aspirate hard
    simple form du zu never occurs never occurs
    comparative duoc'h zuoc'h never occurs never occurs
    superlative duañ zuañ unchanged tuañ

    Derived terms

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    Noun

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    du m

    1. black

    Mutation

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    Mutation of du
    unmutated soft aspirate hard
    du zu unchanged tu

    Note: Certain mutated forms of some words can never occur in standard Breton.
    All possible mutated forms are displayed for convenience.

    Verb

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    du

    1. third-person singular present indicative of duañ

    Mutation

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    See also

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    Colors in Breton · livioù (layout · text)
         gwenn      louet      du
                 ruz              orañjez, melen-ruz; gell              melen
                              gwer, glas             
                 cyan                           glas
                              magenta; glasruz              roz

    Burushaski

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    Pronunciation

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    Noun

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    du (plural duwants)

    1. yew

    See also

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    References

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    Sadaf Munshi (2015), “Word Lists”, in Burushaski Language Documentation Project[5].

    Catalan

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    Verb

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    du

    1. inflection of dur:
      1. third-person singular present indicative
      2. second-person singular imperative

    Cimbrian

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    Etymology

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    From Middle High German du, from Old High German , from Proto-West Germanic *þū, from Proto-Germanic *þū. Cognate with German du, archaic English thou (modern dialectal tha).

    Pronoun

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    du

    1. (Luserna, Sette Comuni) you (thou, singular familiar)
      Bobrall du geast, gedenkhte ber du pist.Wherever you go, remember who you are.

    Inflection

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    Sette Comuni:

    Cimbrian personal pronouns
    nominative accusative dative
    1st person singular ich mich miar
    2nd person
    singular
    familiar du dich diar
    polite iart ach òich
    3rd person
    singular
    m èar, ar in, en iime
    f zi, ze iar
    n es, is es, 's iime
    1st person plural bar,
    bandare
    zich izàndarn
    2nd person plural iart,
    iartàndare, artàndare
    òich, ach ogàndarn
    3rd person plural ze, zòi,
    zandare
    zich innàndarn

    Luserna:

    Personal pronouns (Luserna)
    singular plural
    1st person i biar
    2nd person du iar
    3rd person er, si, 'z se

    References

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    • “du” in Martalar, Umberto Martello; Bellotto, Alfonso (1974), Dizionario della lingua Cimbra dei Sette Communi vicentini, 1st edition, Roana, Italy: Instituto di Cultura Cimbra A. Dal Pozzo
    • Patuzzi, Umberto, ed., (2013) Luserna / Lusérn: Le nostre parole / Ünsarne börtar / Unsere Wörter [Our Words], Luserna, Italy: Comitato unitario delle isole linguistiche storiche germaniche in Italia / Einheitskomitee der historischen deutschen Sprachinseln in Italien

    Cornish

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    Etymology

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    From Old Cornish duw, from Proto-Brythonic *duβ, from Proto-Celtic *dubus, from Proto-Indo-European *dʰewbʰ-.

    Pronunciation

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    Adjective

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    du (comparative moy du)

    1. black
      du:  
    2. dark

    Derived terms

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    See also

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    Colors in Cornish · liwyow (layout · text)
         gwynn      loos, glas      du
                 rudh; kogh              rudhvelyn, melynrudh; gell, gorm              melyn; losvelyn
                              gwyrdh, gwer, glas             
                 glaswyrdh, glaswer; gwerlas              glaswyn, blou              glas
                 glasrudh, purpur; indigo              majenta; purpur, glasrudh              gwynnrudh, kigliw

    Mutation

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    Mutation of du
    radical soft aspirate hard mixed
    du dhu unchanged tu tu

    Note: Certain mutated forms of some words can never occur in standard Cornish.
    All possible mutated forms are displayed for convenience.

    Danish

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    Etymology 1

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    From Old Danish thu, from Old Norse þú, from Proto-Germanic *þū, from Proto-Indo-European *túh₂ (you). Cognate with English thou, Latin , Sanskrit त्वम् (tvam), Avestan 𐬙𐬏𐬨 (tūm), Russian ты (ty).

    Pronunciation

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    Pronoun

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    du (objective dig)

    1. thou, you (2nd person singular subject pronoun, informal)
    See also
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    Danish personal pronouns
    Number Person Type Nominative Oblique Possessive
    common neuter plural
    Singular First jeg mig min mit mine
    Second modern / informal du dig din dit dine
    formal (uncommon) De Dem Deres
    Third masculine (person) han ham hans
    feminine (person) hun hende hendes
    common (noun) den dens
    neuter (noun) det dets
    indefinite man en ens
    reflexive sig sin sit sine
    Plural First modern vi os vores
    archaic / formal vor vort vore
    Second I jer jeres
    Third de dem deres
    reflexive sig

    Etymology 2

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    From Old Danish dughæ, from Old Norse duga, from Proto-Germanic *duganą (to be useful), cognate with Swedish duga, German taugen, Gothic 𐌳𐌿𐌲𐌰𐌽 (dugan).

    Pronunciation

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    Verb

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    du (imperative du, present dur or duer, past duede, past participle duet)

    1. be good
    2. be fit
    Conjugation
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    Conjugation of du
    active passive
    present duer or dur
    past duede
    infinitive du
    imperative du
    participle
    present -
    past duet
    (auxiliary verb have)
    gerund

    References

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    Dena'ina

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    Particle

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    du

    1. interrogative particle (placed at the end of the sentence to make a question)

    Dutch

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    Alternative forms

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    Etymology

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    From Middle Dutch du, from Old Dutch thū, from Proto-West Germanic *þū, from Proto-Germanic *þū, from Proto-Indo-European *túh₂.

    Pronunciation

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    • IPA(key): /dy/
    • Hyphenation: du
    • Rhymes: -y

    Pronoun

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    du

    1. (obsolete or dialectal) Second-person singular informal pronoun; thou
      • 1620, Jacob Cats, Velt-teycken, alle eerbare jonge lieden toegeeygent:
        Sy roept, du bist een slaef, in mijne dienst gebonden
        She calls, thou art a slave, bound to my service
      • 1625, Joost van den Vondel, Wiech-liedt:
        Soo leyt dyn memmetje dy in dyn wiechje te rust.
        So thy mama lays thee to rest in thy cradle.

    Usage notes

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    • Du was already falling out of general use in early modern Dutch. It was still relatively common in the oblique cases, in vocatives or close to vocative appositions and when indicating contempt.
    • The corresponding verbal ending was -st. The present form of zijn was bist, for hebben the present forms hebst and hest were in use. When the nominative directly followed the verb, contraction usually occurred: -stu; bistu, hebstu.

    Declension

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    Elfdalian

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    Etymology

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    From Old Norse þú, from Proto-Germanic *þū, from Proto-Indo-European *túh₂. Cognate with Swedish du.

    Pronoun

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    du

    1. you (singular), thou

    Declension

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    Singular Plural
    Nominative Accusative Dative Nominative Object
    1 ig mig wįð uoss
    2 du dig
    3 masc. an an ånum, åm dier diem
    fem. ą̊ ån, åna enner, en
    neut. dyö

    Emilian

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    Emilian cardinal numbers
     <  1 2 3  > 
        Cardinal : du

    Etymology

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    Inherited from Latin duo, duae.

    Pronunciation

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    Numeral

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    du (feminine ) (Parma)

    1. two, 2

    References

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    Esperanto

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    Esperanto numbers (edit)
    20
     ←  1 2 3  → 
        Cardinal: du
        Ordinal: dua
        Adverbial: due
        Multiplier: duobla, duopa
        Fractional: duona, duono

    Etymology

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    From Latin duo, from Proto-Indo-European *dwóh₁.

    Pronunciation

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    Numeral

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    du

    1. two (2)

    Derived terms

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    Further reading

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    Fala

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    Alternative forms

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    Etymology

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    From Old Galician-Portuguese do, equivalent to de (of) +‎ u (masculine singular definite article).

    Contraction

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    du m sg (plural dus, feminine da, feminine plural das)

    1. (Lagarteiru, Valverdeñu) of the

    References

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    • Valeš, Miroslav (2021), Diccionariu de A Fala: lagarteiru, mañegu, valverdeñu (web)[6], 2nd edition, Minde, Portugal: CIDLeS, published 2022, →ISBN, page 30

    French

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    Etymology

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      Inherited from Old French del. The expected modern form would be *deau or *deu, but it underwent stronger contraction, due to its unstressed use. Akin to Galician do, Portuguese do, Sicilian , Italian and Spanish del.

      Pronunciation

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      Contraction

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      du

      1. contraction of de +‎ le, literally of the
        « Eussent » est la troisième personne du pluriel de l'imparfait du subjonctif de « avoir ».
        "Eussent" is the third-person plural imperfect subjunctive [form] of "avoir."
        • 1802, Charles Brillat, Pierre Bazaine, Métrologie française, page 249:
          Le bouge donne 9 [neuf] litres plus que le point qui correspond à celui du diamètre des fonds indiqué par la jauge []
          The bulge gives 9 [nine] liters more than the point which corresponds to that of the diameter of the base indicated by the gauge []

      Usage notes

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      • Only used before nouns (or nominalized forms of other parts of speech, most often adjectives) that begin with consonants; before vowel-initial words, the form de l' is used, e.g., as seen above, de l'imparfait.
      [edit]

      Article

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      du m sg (feminine singular de la, plural des)

      1. Forms the partitive article.
        Il mange du pain.He eats bread. / He eats some bread.

      Usage notes

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      • The partitive article is used with uncountable nouns instead of the indefinite article (which is only used with countable nouns). English and most other European languages do not use any article in such cases.
      • Like the indefinite article, the partitive article becomes simple de with grammatical objects in negated sentences: Il ne mange pas de pain. (He doesn't eat bread.)
      • After the actual preposition de (of, from), the partitive article is deleted. So one can never say *de du or *de de la.

      Further reading

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      Gaikundi

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      Noun

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      du

      1. man

      Further reading

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      German

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      Alternative forms

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      Etymology

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      From Middle High German du, duo, , from Old High German (akin to Old Saxon thū and English thou), itself from Proto-West Germanic *þū, from Proto-Germanic *þū, from Proto-Indo-European *túh₂.

      Pronunciation

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      • (unstressed, standard) IPA(key): /du/
      • (unstressed, colloquial) IPA(key): /də/
      • After the second person singular verb ending -st, the /d/ is generally lost when the pronoun is unstressed. Thus hast du is pronounced [ˈhast‿u] even in purposefully enunciated speech.
      • In colloquial speech, chiefly of northern and central Germany, the /d/ can be lost after any preceding coronal. Thus wenn du may be pronounced [ˈvɛn‿u] or [ˈvɛn‿ə].

      Pronoun

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      du

      1. you (singular familiar), thou

      Usage notes

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      • Du is the informal second person pronoun. In formal speech, the third person plural Sie (always capitalised) is used instead.
      • A general rule of thumb is that du is used to address one's friends, relatives, and those under about 16 years of age. Du is always used to address children and non-human beings.
      • Usage also depends on the setting: two unacquainted, middle-aged persons are likely to use du when they meet at social gatherings, but much less so when they happen on each other in the street. People under 30 often use du among each other, but they still use Sie when one of them is at work, e.g. in a shop (some cafés and most pubs are an exception).
      • There is also a great deal of (often subtle) regional variation throughout the German-speaking world.

      Declension

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      Derived terms

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      Further reading

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      • du” in Duden online
      • du”, in Digitales Wörterbuch der deutschen Sprache[7] (in German)

      Gothic

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      Romanization

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      du

      1. romanization of 𐌳𐌿

      Gun

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      Alternative forms

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      Etymology

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      From Proto-Gbe *ɖu.[1] Cognates include Fon ɖù, Saxwe Gbe ɖù, Aja (West Africa) ɖù, Ewe ɖu

      Pronunciation

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      Verb

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      (Nigeria)

      1. to eat
      2. to bite
        Àgọ̀sú hò àvún dàhó dé bọ̀ àvún wá ví étọ̀nAgosu bought a certain big dog and the dog eventually bit his child
      3. to win

      Derived terms

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      References

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      1. ^ Capo, Hounkpati B.C. (1991), A Comparative Phonology of Gbe (Publications in African Languages and Linguistics; 14), Berlin/New York; Garome, Benin: Foris Publications & Labo Gbe (Int), page 215

      Hunsrik

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      Alternative forms

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      • tuu (Wiesemann spelling)

      Etymology

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      From Middle High German and Old High German (akin to Old Saxon thū and English thou).

      Pronunciation

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      Pronoun

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      du

      1. thou, you
        Du bist aarich scheen.
        You are so beautiful.

      Inflection

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      Hunsrik personal pronouns
      nominative accusative dative
      proclitic enclitic stressed unstressed stressed unstressed
      singular 1st person ich
      eich
      -ich mich
      meich
      meer mer
      m'r
      2nd person
      (informal)
      du
      dau/Dau
      -du, -de
      -Dau, -De
      dich
      deich/Deich
      deer der
      d'r/D'r
      3rd
      person
      m er; där -er ihn en ihm em
      f sie; die -se sie / ihns se eer
      ehr
      re
      n es; das
      et, 't
      's es
      et

      -et, -'t
      ihm em
      plural 1st person meer mer uns
      uhs
      2nd person deer
      Ehr, Dehr
      der eich
      Auch
      3rd person sie; die -se sie se denne

      Further reading

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      Ido

      [edit]
      Ido numbers (edit)
      20
       ←  1 2 3  → 
          Cardinal: du
          Ordinal: duesma
          Adverbial: dufoye
          Multiplier: duopla
          Fractional: duima

      Etymology

      [edit]

      From Esperanto du, from French deux, Spanish dos, Italian due, ultimately from Proto-Indo-European *dwóh₁.

      Numeral

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      du

      1. two (2)

      Jamaican Creole

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      Etymology

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      Derived from English do.

      Pronunciation

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      Verb

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      du

      1. to do
        Shi aks im fi du sitn fi ar.
        She asked him to do something for her.
        Singin muotaim du ina gruup a ada myuuzishan
        Singing is often done in a group of other musicians
        • 2012, Di Jamiekan Nyuu Testiment, Edinburgh: DJB, published 2012, →ISBN, Filipiyan 4:13:
          Mi kyan du eniting, kaaz Krais Jiizas gi mi di powa fi du it.
          I can do all things through Christ, because he gives me strength [to do it].

      Further reading

      [edit]
      • du at majstro.com

      Japanese

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      Romanization

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      du

      1. The katakana syllable ドゥ (du) in Hepburn romanization.

      Kalasha

      [edit]

      Etymology

      [edit]

      From Sanskrit द्व (dva), from Proto-Indo-European *dwóh₁. Compare Hindi दो (do), Bhojpuri दू (), Konkani दोन (don).

      Numeral

      [edit]

      du

      1. two (2)

      Kamkata-viri

      [edit]

      Etymology

      [edit]

      From Proto-Nuristani *dwara, from Proto-Indo-Iranian *dʰwā́r, from Proto-Indo-European *dʰwṓr.

      Noun

      [edit]

      du m (Western, Northeastern, Southeastern)[1][2]

      1. door

      References

      [edit]
      1. ^ Strand, Richard F. (2016), “d′u”, in Nûristânî Etymological Lexicon[2]
      2. ^ Halfmann, Jakob (2024). A Grammatical Description of the Katë Language (Nuristani) (PhD thesis). Köln: Universität zu Köln.

      Lithuanian

      [edit]

      Etymology

      [edit]

        From Proto-Baltic *d(u)u̯ō, from Proto-Indo-European *dwóh₁. Compare Latvian divi. Cognate to Latin duo.

        Pronunciation

        [edit]

        Numeral

        [edit]
        Lithuanian cardinal numbers
         <  1 2 3  > 
            Cardinal : du
            Ordinal : antras

         m (feminine dvi̇̀)

        1. two (2)

        Declension

        [edit]
        Declension of du
        masculine feminine
        nominative dvi̇̀
        genitive dviejų̃ dviejų̃
        dative dvi̇́em dvi̇́em
        accusative dvi̇̀
        instrumental dviẽm dviẽm
        locative dviejuosè dviejosè

        Lower Sorbian

        [edit]

        Etymology

        [edit]

        From Proto-Slavic *jьdǫ (first-person singular) and *jьdǫtь (third-person plural), inflected forms of *jьti.

        Pronunciation

        [edit]

        Verb

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        du

        1. inflection of hyś:
          1. first-person singular present
          2. third-person plural present

        Synonyms

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        • (first-person singular): źom

        Luxembourgish

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        Etymology

        [edit]

        From Proto-Germanic *þū.

        Pronunciation

        [edit]

        Pronoun

        [edit]

        du

        1. second-person singular, informal, nominative: you, thou
          Wéi al bass du?How old are you?

        Declension

        [edit]
        Luxembourgish personal pronouns
        nominative accusative dative reflexive
        stressed unstressed stressed unstressed stressed unstressed
        singular 1st person ech mech mir mer like dat. and acc.
        2nd person informal du de dech dir der like dat. and acc.
        formal Dir Der Iech Iech [əɕ] Iech Iech [əɕ] Iech
        3rd person m hien en hien en him em sech
        f si se si se hir er sech
        n hatt et ('t) hatt et ('t) him em sech
        plural 1st person mir mer eis (ons) eis (ons) eis (ons)
        2nd person dir der iech iech [əɕ] iech iech [əɕ] iech
        3rd person si se si se hinnen en sech

        Mandarin

        [edit]

        Romanization

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        du

        1. nonstandard spelling of
        2. nonstandard spelling of
        3. nonstandard spelling of
        4. nonstandard spelling of

        Usage notes

        [edit]
        • Transcriptions of Mandarin into the Latin script often do not distinguish between the critical tonal differences employed in the Mandarin language, using words such as this one without indication of tone.

        Middle Dutch

        [edit]

        Etymology

        [edit]

        From Old Dutch thū, from Proto-West Germanic *þū, from Proto-Germanic *þū.

        Pronunciation

        [edit]

        Pronoun

        [edit]

        du

        1. thou, you (singular, informal)
          Synonym: gi

        Usage notes

        [edit]

        This pronoun began to be replaced by gi in formal address during the Middle Dutch period, and eventually fell out of use altogether.

        Inflection

        [edit]
        Middle Dutch personal pronouns
        nominative accusative dative genitive
        singular 1st person ic mi mijn
        2nd person du di dijn
        3rd
        person
        m hi hem, hen sijn
        f si haer haer
        n het hem, hen sijn
        plural 1st person wi ons onse
        2nd person gi u uwe
        3rd person si hem, hen haer

        Descendants

        [edit]
        • Dutch: (obsolete) du, dou, douw
        • Limburgish: doe

        Further reading

        [edit]
        • du”, in Vroegmiddelnederlands Woordenboek, 2000
        • Verwijs, E.; Verdam, J. (1885–1929), “du”, in Middelnederlandsch Woordenboek, The Hague: Martinus Nijhoff, →ISBN

        Middle English

        [edit]

        Adjective

        [edit]

        du

        1. alternative form of dewe (due)

        Middle High German

        [edit]

        Etymology

        [edit]

        Inherited from Old High German , from Proto-West Germanic *þū, from Proto-Germanic *þū, whence also Old English þū, Old Norse þú, and ultimately from Proto-Indo-European *túh₂.

        Pronunciation

        [edit]
        • IPA(key): (before 13th CE) /ˈdu/, /ˈduː/

        Pronoun

        [edit]

        du or

        1. (personal) you (thou, singular familiar)

        Inflection

        [edit]
        Middle High German personal pronouns
        nominative genitive dative accusative
        singular first person ich mīn mir mich
        second person du, dīn dir dich
        third
        person
        m ër
        CG hë(r)
        sīn im(e) in
        f siu ir(e) ir(e) sie
        n ëȥ
        CG , it
        es im(e) ëȥ
        CG , it
        plural first person wir unser uns uns, unsich
        second person ir iuwer iu, iuch iuch
        third
        person
        m sie ir(e) in sie
        f
        n siu siu
        The distinction of the forms siu and sie as shown above is typical of earlier Upper German texts, but was never general. The forms and si existed additionally and all four were increasingly used without differentiation.

        Descendants

        [edit]
        • Alemannic German: du
          Swabian: dau, d
        • Bavarian:
          Cimbrian: du
          Mòcheno: du
        • Central Franconian: du, dou
          Hunsrik: du
          Kölsch: do
        • German: du
        • Luxembourgish: du
        • Rhine Franconian:
          Palatine German: du
          Pennsylvania German: du
        • Yiddish: דו (du)

        Middle Low German

        [edit]

        Etymology

        [edit]

        From Old Saxon thū, from Proto-Germanic *þū.

        Pronunciation

        [edit]

        Pronoun

        [edit]

        1. thou, you (second person singular nominative)

        Declension

        [edit]
        Middle Low German personal pronouns
        nominative accusative dative genitive
        singular 1st person ik (ek) (, mik, mek) mîn (mîner)
        2nd person (, dik, dek) dîn (dîner)
        3rd person m (, hie) ēne, en (ȫne, ȫn) ēme, em (ȫme, en) sîn (sîner)
        n it (et)
        f (, sie, sü̂) ēre, ēr (ērer, ȫrer)
        plural 1st person (, wie) uns (ûs, ös, ü̂sik) unser (ûser)
        2nd person (, î) (jûwe, û, jük, gik) jûwer (ûwer)
        3rd person (, sie) em, öm, jüm (en, ēnen, ȫnen) ēre, ēr (ērer, ȫrer)

        For an explanation of the forms in brackets see here.

        Descendants

        [edit]

        Mòcheno

        [edit]

        Etymology

        [edit]

        From Middle High German du, from Old High German , from Proto-West Germanic *þū, from Proto-Germanic *þū. Cognate with German du, archaic English thou (modern dialectal tha).

        Pronoun

        [edit]

        du

        1. you (thou, singular familiar)

        Inflection

        [edit]

        References

        [edit]

        Mokilese

        [edit]

        Pronunciation

        [edit]

        Verb

        [edit]

        du

        1. (intransitive) to sink

        Derived terms

        [edit]

        Norman

        [edit]

        Etymology

        [edit]

        From Latin dux, ducem.

        Noun

        [edit]

        du m

        1. duke
        [edit]

        Norn

        [edit]

        Etymology

        [edit]

        From Old Norse þú, from Proto-Germanic *þū, from Proto-Indo-European *túh₂.

        Pronunciation

        [edit]

        Pronoun

        [edit]

        du (accusative doch, dative dir, genitive din)

        1. you, thou (second person, singular)

        References

        [edit]

        North Frisian

        [edit]

        Alternative forms

        [edit]

        Etymology

        [edit]

        From Old Frisian dwā, from Proto-Germanic *dōną. Cognates include West Frisian dwaan, English do.

        Verb

        [edit]

        du

        1. (Föhr-Amrum) to do
        2. (Föhr-Amrum) to give

        Conjugation

        [edit]

        Northern Kurdish

        [edit]
        Northern Kurdish cardinal numbers
         <  1 2 3  > 
            Cardinal : du

        Etymology

        [edit]

          From Proto-Iranian *dwáH (compare Persian دو (do), Pashto دوه (dwa), Avestan 𐬛𐬎𐬎𐬀 (duua)), from Proto-Indo-Iranian *dwáH (compare Sanskrit द्व (dvá), Marathi दोन (don), Hindi दो (do)/Urdu دو (do), Punjabi ਦੋ (do)), from Proto-Indo-European *dwóh₁ (compare Russian два (dva), Lithuanian du, Greek δύο (dýo), Spanish dos, English two).

          Pronunciation

          [edit]

          Numeral

          [edit]
          Central Kurdish دوو ()

          du

          1. two (2)

          Northern Sami

          [edit]

          Pronunciation

          [edit]
          • (Kautokeino) IPA(key): /ˈtuː/

          Pronoun

          [edit]

          1. accusative/genitive of don

          Norwegian Bokmål

          [edit]

          Etymology

          [edit]

          From Old Norse þú (you), from Proto-Germanic *þū (you), from Proto-Indo-European *túh₂ (you).

          Pronunciation

          [edit]

          Pronoun

          [edit]

          du (objective case deg)

          1. thou, you (second person, singular)

          Derived terms

          [edit]
          • due (to say 'you' to someone)

          Verb

          [edit]

          du

          1. imperative of due

          References

          [edit]

          See also

          [edit]
          Norwegian Bokmål personal pronouns
          Number Person Type Nominative Oblique Possessive
          feminine masculine neuter plural
          Singular First jeg meg mi min mitt mine
          Second general du deg di din ditt dine
          formal (rare) De Dem Deres
          Third feminine (person) hun henne hennes
          masculine (person) han ham / han hans
          feminine (noun) den dens
          masculine (noun)
          neuter (noun) det dets
          reflexive seg si sin sitt sine
          Plural First vi oss vår vårt våre
          Second general dere deres
          formal (very rare) De Dem Deres
          Third general de dem deres
          reflexive seg si sin sitt sine

          Norwegian Nynorsk

          [edit]

          Etymology

          [edit]

          From Old Norse þú, from Proto-Germanic *þū, from Proto-Indo-European *túh₂. Akin to English thou.

          Pronunciation

          [edit]

          Pronoun

          [edit]

          du (objective case deg)

          1. you, thou (second person, singular)

          References

          [edit]

          See also

          [edit]
          Norwegian Nynorsk personal pronouns
          first person second person reflexive third person
          masculine feminine neuter
          singular nominative eg, je1 du han ho det, dat2
          accusative meg deg seg han, honom ho, henne det, dat2
          dative2 meg deg seg honom henne di2
          genitive min din sin hans hennar, hennes1 dess3
          plural nominative me, vi de, dokker dei
          accusative oss, okk dykk, dokker seg dei, deim2
          dative oss, okk dykk, dokker seg deim2
          genitive vår, okkar dykkar, dokkar sin deira, deires1

          1Obsolete. 2Landsmål. 3Rare or literary. Italic forms unofficial today.

          Nupe

          [edit]

          Etymology 1

          [edit]

          Pronunciation

          [edit]

          Verb

          [edit]

          du

          1. to boil
            Musa dàdà á nakàn duMusa quickly boiled the meat
          2. to brew

          Etymology 2

          [edit]

          Pronunciation

          [edit]

          Verb

          [edit]

          1. (of rain) to fall
            Ele è àIt's not raining (literally, “Rain is not falling”)

          Etymology 3

          [edit]

          Pronunciation

          [edit]

          Verb

          [edit]

          du

          1. to shake

          Obokuitai

          [edit]

          Noun

          [edit]

          du

          1. bird

          References

          [edit]
          • Bill Palmer, editor (2018), The Languages and Linguistics of the New Guinea Area, Berlin: de Gruyter, →ISBN, page 531

          Old French

          [edit]

          Alternative forms

          [edit]

          Contraction

          [edit]

          du

          1. contraction of de + le (of the)

          Old High German

          [edit]
          one drawing of the inscription on the Bülach fibula

          Alternative forms

          [edit]

          Etymology

          [edit]

          From Proto-West Germanic *þū, from Proto-Germanic *þū, whence also Old English þū, Old Norse þú, and ultimately from Proto-Indo-European *túh₂. Perhaps the earliest attestation of the pronoun is the inscription on the Bülach fibula, which may show ᛞᚢ (du) already differentiated from other Germanic languages’ þu.

          Pronunciation

          [edit]

          Pronoun

          [edit]

          1. thou, you (second-person singular pronoun)
            • 6th-7th century, inscription on the Bülach fibula:
              ᚠᚱᛁᚠᚱᛁᛞᛁᛚ / ᛞᚢ / ...
              frifridil / du / []
              frifridil / du / ...
              frifridil / du / []
              [my] beloved, you / []

          Usage notes

          [edit]

          Some speakers of Old High German appear to have contrasted the "polite" singular (plural forms) with the regular, informal singular (singular forms), as in New High German (Modern German) Sie versus du. This distinction is however not well-attested, and may have been regional, genre-dependent, or only in Late Old High German.

          Inflection

          [edit]
          Old High German personal pronouns
          nominative genitive dative accusative
          singular first person ih
          (ihha, ihcha)
          mīn mir mih
          second person dīn dir dih
          third
          person
          m er (her) (sīn) imu, imo inan, in
          f siu; , si ira (iru, iro) iru, iro sia
          n iz es, is imu, imo iz
          plural first person wir unsēr uns unsih
          second person1 ir iuwēr iu iuwih
          third
          person
          n sie iro im, in sie
          f sio sio
          n siu siu

          1 Also polite singular form

          Descendants

          [edit]
          • Middle High German: du
            • Alemannic German: du
              Swabian: dau, d
            • Bavarian:
              Cimbrian: du
              Mòcheno: du
            • Central Franconian: du, dou
              Hunsrik: du
              Kölsch: do
            • German: du
            • Luxembourgish: du
            • Rhine Franconian:
              Palatine German: du
              Pennsylvania German: du
            • Yiddish: דו (du)

          References

          [edit]
          • Heinz Klingenberg, Runenfibel von Bülach, Kanton Zürich. Liebesinschrift aus alemannischer Frühzeit, in the Alemannisches Jahrbuch (1973/75), page 308
          • Heinz Klingenberg, Die Runeninschrift aus Bülach, in Helvetia archaeologica, volume 7 (1976), pages 116–121
          • Stephan Opitz, Südgermanische Runeninschriften im älteren Futhark aus der Merowingerzeit (Freiburg im Breisgau, 1977)

          Old Irish

          [edit]

          Preposition

          [edit]

          du

          1. alternative form of do

          Mutation

          [edit]
          Mutation of du
          radical lenition nasalization
          du du
          pronounced with /ð-/
          ndu

          Note: Certain mutated forms of some words can never occur in Old Irish.
          All possible mutated forms are displayed for convenience.

          Pennsylvania German

          [edit]

          Etymology

          [edit]

          Compare German du, English thou, Swedish du.

          Pronoun

          [edit]

          du

          1. you, thou

          Declension

          [edit]
          Pennsylvania German personal pronouns
          Number singular plural
          Person/
          Gender
          1st 2nd person 3rd person 1st 2nd 3rd
          familiar polite/formal m f n
          nominative ich du
          de1
          dihr
          der1
          Sie
          er sie
          se1
          es mir
          mer1
          dihr
          der1
          sie
          dative mir
          mer1
          dir
          der1
          eich
          Ihne
          Ne1
          ihm
          em1
          ihre
          re1
          ihm
          em1
          uns eich ihne
          ne1
          accusative mich dich eich
          Sie
          ihn
          en1
          sie
          se1
          es sie

          1 unstressed

          Pite Sami

          [edit]

          Pronunciation

          [edit]

          Pronoun

          [edit]

          du

          1. those

          See also

          [edit]
          Pite Sami demonstrative pronouns
          singular plural
          proximal dát
          distal dat da
          remote dut du

          References

          [edit]
          • Joshua Wilbur (2014), A grammar of Pite Saami, Berlin: Language Science Press

          Plautdietsch

          [edit]

          Pronoun

          [edit]

          du (oblique die)

          1. you (singular)

          Romagnol

          [edit]
          Romagnol numbers (edit)
          20
          [a], [b] ←  1 2 3  → [a], [b]
              Cardinal: du
              Ordinal: șgónd
              Multiplier: dópi
              Fractional: mëẓ

          Etymology

          [edit]

          From Latin dŭo (two).

          Pronunciation

          [edit]

          Numeral

          [edit]

          du (feminine )

          1. two

          References

          [edit]
          • Masotti, Adelmo (1996), Vocabolario Romagnolo Italiano [Romagnol-Italian dictionary] (in Italian), Bologna: Zanichelli, pages 189, 194

          Romanian

          [edit]

          Pronunciation

          [edit]

          Verb

          [edit]

          du

          1. second-person singular imperative of duce
            Du-te acasă.
            Go home.

          Salar

          [edit]

          Etymology

          [edit]

          Borrowed from Chinese .

          Pronunciation

          [edit]
          • (Xunhua, Qinghai) IPA(key): /tu/

          Noun

          [edit]

          du

          1. poison
            Synonym: ağu
            Antonym: em
            Du vurci.
            Have been poisoned.

          References

          [edit]
          • 林莲云 [Lin Lianyun] (1992), “du”, in 撒拉汉汉撒拉词汇 [Salar-Chinese, Chinese-Salar Vocabulary], 成都 [Chéngdū]: 四川民族出版社, →ISBN, page 137

          Saterland Frisian

          [edit]

          Etymology

          [edit]

          From Old Frisian thū, from Proto-West Germanic *þū.

          Pronunciation

          [edit]
          • IPA(key): /du/
          • Hyphenation: du
          • Rhymes: -u

          Pronoun

          [edit]

          du (oblique die)

          1. thou, you

          Usage notes

          [edit]
          • du is at times omitted when used with a verb.

          See also

          [edit]
          Saterland Frisian personal pronouns
          subject case object case
          stressed unstressed
          singular 1st iek mie
          2nd du die
          3rd m hie er him
          f ju ze hier
          n dät et dät
          plural 1st wie uus
          2nd jie jou
          3rd jo ze hier

          References

          [edit]
          • Marron C. Fort (2015), “du”, in Saterfriesisches Wörterbuch mit einer phonologischen und grammatischen Übersicht, Buske, →ISBN

          Scots

          [edit]

          Pronoun

          [edit]

          du (objective case dee, vocative dee, possessive determiner dines)

          1. Insular Scots form of thou (thou)

          Further reading

          [edit]

          du”, in The Dictionary of the Scots Language, Edinburgh: Scottish Language Dictionaries, 2004–present, →OCLC.

          Sranan Tongo

          [edit]

          Etymology 1

          [edit]

          From English do.

          Verb

          [edit]

          du

          1. to do

          Noun

          [edit]

          du

          1. deed, action

          Etymology 2

          [edit]

          Probably from Ewe ɖú (dance), Fon ɖùwè (dance),[1] from Proto-Gbe *ɖú (-we).

          Noun

          [edit]

          du

          1. (historical) a festival of song and dance organised and performed by and for enslaved people
          Descendants
          [edit]

          References

          [edit]
          1. ^ Norval Smith (2009), “A preliminary list of probable Gbe lexical items in the Surinam Creoles”, in P. Muysken, N. Smith, editors, Surviving the Middle Passage: The West Africa-Surinam Sprachbund, Berlin: De Gruyter Mouton, →ISBN, page 465

          Sumerian

          [edit]

          Romanization

          [edit]

          du

          1. romanization of 𒁺 (du)

          Swedish

          [edit]
          Swedish Wikipedia has an article on:
          Wikipedia sv

          Alternative forms

          [edit]

          Etymology

          [edit]

          From Old Swedish þū, from Old Norse þú, from Proto-Germanic *þū, from Proto-Indo-European *túh₂. Cognate with English thou, German du.

          Pronunciation

          [edit]
          • IPA(key): /dʉː/, [d̪ʉː], (unstressed) /dɵ/
          • Audio:(file)
          • Rhymes: -ʉː

          Pronoun

          [edit]

          du

          1. you (singular subjective case)
            Nisse, du är en liten groda
            Nisse, you are a small frog
            Du är här, så jag ser dig
            You [subject] are here, so I see you [object]
            • 1981, X Models, “Två av oss [Two of us]”‎[8]:
              Det finns bara en av mig och det är jag. Det finns bara en av dig och det är du. Det finns bara två av oss, och det är vi.
              There is only one of me and that is I. There is only one of you [object] and that is you [subject]. There are only two of us, and that is us [we – subject]. [Swedish has some of the same subject/object fuzziness as English, but a standalone "Det är <pronoun>" idiomatically (through intuition rather than being taught) uses the subject form]
            1. thou (if fitting for the context)
              • 1649, Jacobus Petri Chronander, Bele-Snack, Eller Een Ny Comœdia, act I, scene IV, page 40:
                TV Konstrijke Mästare, godt rådh giff,
                Skall man nu skona thenna skelmens lijff?
                THOU artful Master, good counsel give,
                Should one now spare this scoundrel's life?
          2. Used as a vocative (to get someone's attention, or for emphasis or the like); hey
            • 1984, “Vargsången [The wolf song]”, Astrid Lindgren (lyrics), Björn Isfält (music)‎[9]performed by Lena Nyman:
              Vargen ylar i nattens skog. Han vill men kan inte sova. Hungern river hans vargabuk, och det är kallt i hans stova. Du varg, du varg, kom inte hit. Ungen min får du aldrig.
              The wolf howls in the forest of the night. He wants to sleep but cannot. ["He wants to but cannot sleep" – "He wants to X" is "Han vill X"] [The] hunger tears his wolf belly, and it is cold in his stove [archaic, dialectal, in the dated English sense]. Hey wolf, hey wolf, do not come [to] here [hither]. My child you will never have.
            • 1994, Uno Svenningsson, “Tro på varann [Believe in Each Other]”, in Uno[10], performed by Uno Svenningsson and Eva Dahlgren:
              Du, jag vill att vi tror på varann.
              Hey, I want us to believe in each other.
            Du Nisse, har du matat katten?
            Hey Nisse, have you fed the cat?
            Du, skulle du kunna räcka mig skeden, är du snäll?
            Hey, could you hand me the spoon, please?
            Jo du, jag kom precis på en till grej vi måste göra
            Oh, by the way [roughly – literally, "yeah you," or "listen you" or the like – see jo], I just remembered another thing we need to do
            Du, du ska ge fan i min hamster
            Hey, [you shall] stay away from my hamster [with an aggressive and somewhat threatening tone]
            – Varför gör han det inte bara? – Ja du, vem vet? / Ja du, det är en bra fråga.
            – Why doesn't he just do it? – Yeah, who knows? / Yeah, that's a good question. [with the du acknowledging the question, adding a confounded tone]
            Nej du, så lätt slipper du inte undan!
            Oh no, you're not getting away that easily! [Compare the change in tone between "No, you're not getting away that easily!" and "No, dragon, you're not getting away that easily!"]

          Usage notes

          [edit]

          While du is the traditionally familiar mode of address, it is since the early '70s the standard in almost all circumstances, possibly capitalized in formal communications. This was the result of the so-called du-reformen.

          Recently, use of the second-person plural pronoun ni as a less familiar (and thus more formal) pronoun has appeared to some extent, but mainly amongst shopkeepers towards customers.

          The same pronoun ni has also been used historically as a formal way of address, but its use has (in particular in Sweden, not so much in Swedish-speaking parts of Finland) been restricted to addressing people of lower social status, whereby a plethora of different constructions were employed as to avoid the issue of pronouns whatsoever. See also the article about T-V distinction in Wikipedia.

          Declension

          [edit]
          Swedish personal pronouns
          Number Person nominative oblique possessive
          common neuter plural
          singular first jag mig, mej3 min mitt mina
          second du dig, dej3 din ditt dina
          third masculine (person) han honom, han2, en5 hans
          feminine (person) hon henne, na5 hennes
          gender-neutral (person)1 hen hen, henom7 hens
          common (noun) den den dess
          neuter (noun) det det dess
          indefinite man or en4 en ens
          reflexive sig, sej3 sin sitt sina
          plural first vi oss vår, våran2 vårt, vårat2 våra
          second ni er er, eran2, ers6 ert, erat2 era
          archaic I eder eder, eders6 edert edra
          third de, dom3 dem, dom3 deras
          reflexive sig, sej3 sin sitt sina
          1Neologism. Usage has increased since 2010, though it remains limited.
          2Informal
          4Dialectal, also used lately as an alternative to man, to avoid association to the male gender.
          5Informal, somewhat dialectal
          6Formal address
          7Discouraged by the Swedish Language Council

          Derived terms

          [edit]

          See also

          [edit]
          • hallå ("Hey!", more literally)
          • ni (you (plural subjective case))
          • öh (also used to get someone's attention)

          References

          [edit]

          Anagrams

          [edit]

          Tlingit

          [edit]

          Pronoun

          [edit]

          du

          1. his/her

          See also

          [edit]

          Tregami

          [edit]
          Tregami cardinal numbers
           <  1 2 3  > 
              Cardinal : du

          Etymology

          [edit]

            From Proto-Nuristani *dū, from Proto-Indo-Iranian *dwáH, from Proto-Indo-European *dwóh₁.

            Pronunciation

            [edit]

            Numeral

            [edit]

            du (Gambir)[1]

            1. two

            References

            [edit]
            1. ^ Strand, Richard F. (2016), “d′u”, in Nûristânî Etymological Lexicon[3]

            Venetan

            [edit]

            Etymology

            [edit]

            Compare Italian due

            Numeral

            [edit]

            du m

            1. two

            Synonyms

            [edit]

            Vietnamese

            [edit]

            Etymology

            [edit]

            Both characters below depict a single etymology. (MC yuw) also has a less common reading do, now seen only in do thám.

            Pronunciation

            [edit]

            Romanization

            [edit]

            du

            1. Sino-Vietnamese reading of
            2. Sino-Vietnamese reading of

            Derived terms

            [edit]

            Welsh

            [edit]

            Etymology

            [edit]

            From Proto-Brythonic *duβ, from Proto-Celtic *dubus, from Proto-Indo-European *dʰewbʰ-.

            Pronunciation

            [edit]

            Adjective

            [edit]

            du (feminine singular du, plural duon, equative dued, comparative duach, superlative duaf)

            1. black
              Mae ganddo fo fwstash du.
              He has a black mustache

            Derived terms

            [edit]

            See also

            [edit]
            Colors in Welsh · lliwiau (layout · text)
                 gwyn      llwyd      du
                         coch; rhudd              oren, melyngoch; brown              melyn; melynwyn
                         melynwyrdd              gwyrdd             
                         gwyrddlas; glaswyrdd              asur, gwynlas              glas
                         fioled, rhuddlas; indigo              majenta; porffor              pinc, rhuddwyn

            Mutation

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            Mutated forms of du
            radical soft nasal aspirate
            du ddu nu unchanged

            Note: Certain mutated forms of some words can never occur in standard Welsh.
            All possible mutated forms are displayed for convenience.

            Further reading

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            • D. G. Lewis, N. Lewis, editors (2005–present), “du”, in Gweiadur: the Welsh–English Dictionary, Gwerin
            • R. J. Thomas, G. A. Bevan, P. J. Donovan, A. Hawke, et al., editors (1950–present), “du”, in Geiriadur Prifysgol Cymru Online (in Welsh), University of Wales Centre for Advanced Welsh & Celtic Studies

            White Hmong

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            Pronunciation

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            Adjective

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            du

            1. smooth

            Yoruba

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            Etymology 1

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            Pronunciation

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            Verb

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            1. to scramble for, to compete
              wọ́n du oúnjẹThey scrambled for food
            Usage notes
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            • du before a direct object
            Derived terms
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            Etymology 2

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            Pronunciation

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            Verb

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            du

            1. (Lagos, intransitive) to run, to sprint
              Synonym:
            Derived terms
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            Etymology 3

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            Pronunciation

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            Verb

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            1. (intransitive, of a person or animal) to bleed
              Synonyms: dújẹ̀, ṣẹ̀jẹ̀
            Derived terms
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            • ìdú (the act of bleeding)

            Etymology 4

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            Cognate with Igala

            Pronunciation

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            Verb

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            1. to be black, to be dark
              Antonym: fun
              ó láwọ̀Her skin is dark
            Derived terms
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