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gon
From Wiktionary, the free dictionary
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See also: Appendix:Variations of "gon"
Translingual
Etymology 1
Clipping of English Gondi, from Gondi గోండి (gōṇḍī).
Symbol
gon
Etymology 2
Symbol
gon
- (ISO symbol) gradian
English
Etymology 1
Clipping of gonna. Compare Middle English gon, dialectal gan, Dutch gaan.
Pronunciation
Contraction
gon
Etymology 2
From Ancient Greek γωνία (gōnía, “angle”). More in Wikipedia at gradian § History and name.
Noun
gon (plural gons)
- (geometry, trigonometry) One hundredth of a right angle: a gradian.
Related terms
- goniometry and other derivatives of gonio-
Translations
Etymology 3
Clipping.
Noun
gon (plural gons)
Anagrams
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Breton
Noun
gon
- soft mutation of kon
Finnish
Noun
gon
Haitian Creole
Contraction
gon
Japanese
Romanization
gon
Middle English
Etymology 1
From Old English gān, from Proto-West Germanic *gān, from Proto-Germanic *gāną, compare German gehen. Past tense supplied by Old English wendan, from Proto-Germanic *wandijaną, or a suppletive stem yed-, yod-, from Old English ēod-.
For the spelling geen in the representation of Northern Middle English in Chaucer's The Reeve's Tale, see hom (“home”).
Alternative forms
Pronunciation
Verb
gon
- to go
- c. 1378-9, [William Langland], “Paſſus .xx᷒. ⁊ prım᷒ de Dobeſt”, in [Piers Plowman, A Treatise on Sin] (W, B-text), London, published c. 1400, →OCLC, folio 124, recto; republished as Thorlac Turville-Petre, Hoyt N. Duggan, editors, Cambridge, Trinity College, MS B.15.17 (The Piers Plowman Electronic Archive; 2), SEENET, 2014, →ISBN:
- Heuy chered I yede. and elenge in herte / I ne wıſte wher to ete. ne at what place
- I travelled grave-faced and with a gloomy heart; / I didn't know where or at what point to eat.
Conjugation
1 Sometimes used as a formal 2nd-person singular.
Descendants
References
- “gōn, v.”, in MED Online, Ann Arbor, Mich.: University of Michigan, 2007.
- Smith, Jeremy J. (1994), “The Great Vowel Shift in the North of England, and Some Forms in Chaucer's Reeve's Tale”, in Neuphilologische Mitteilungen, volume 95, number 4, Helsinki: Modern Language Society, →ISSN, →OCLC, page 434.
Etymology 2
From Old English gān, ġegān, past participle of gān (“to go”), from Proto-Germanic *gānaz, past participle of *gāną (“to go”); equivalent to gon + -en.
Alternative forms
Pronunciation
Verb
gon
- past participle of gon (“to go”)
Descendants
Etymology 3
From Lady Gunilda; a name for a crossbow. More at English gun.
Noun
gon
- alternative form of gunne
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Polish
Etymology
Inherited from Proto-Slavic *gònъ. Compare Czech hon, Russian гон (gon), and Silesian gōn.
Pronunciation
Noun
gon m inan
- (hunting) chase, pursuit
- (hunting) barking of hounds during a hunt
- mating season of fallow deer and chamois
- Hypernym: okres godowy
- (obsolete) hunt, hunting
Declension
Declension of gon
Related terms
adjectives
nouns
Further reading
- gon in Polish dictionaries at PWN
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Scottish Gaelic
Etymology
From Proto-Celtic *gonô, from Proto-Indo-European *gʷʰen- (“to strike, kill”).
Verb
gon (past ghon, future gonaidh, verbal noun gonadh, past participle gonte)
Sranan Tongo
Etymology
Pronunciation
Noun
gon
Teojomulco Chatino
Etymology
Cognate with Tataltepec Chatino ncu̱ (“tortoise”), Western Highland Chatino nkuun⁴ (“tortoise”).
Pronunciation
Noun
gon
References
- Sullivant, J. Ryan (October 2016), “Appendix: Reintroducing Teojomulco Chatino”, in International Journal of American Linguistics, page [5]
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