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Thing
English
Etymology
From Middle English, from Old English þing .
Pronunciation
Noun
thing (plural: things; diminutives: thingy / thingie , thingo [Aus])
- In Scandinavian countries, a legislative or judicial assembly.
- That which is considered to exist as a separate entity or concept.
- Word that can be used to refer to any physical or psychical entity.
Synonyms
Derived terms
Translations
- Albanian: send
- Arabic: شّيء (ʃajʔ)
- Basque: gauza
- Cantonese: 東西 (dung1 sai1), 物 (mat6), 事物 (si6 mat6)
- Chinese: 東西 (dōngxī), 物 (wù), 事物 (shìwù)
- Dutch: ding n
- Old English: þing n
- Estonian: asi, ese
- Finnish: asia
- French: chose f, truc m, machin m (informal)
- Frisian: ding n
- German: Thing m,f,n?? (1), Ding n (2,3)
- Galician: cousa
- Greek: πράγμα (prágma)
- Guarani: mba'e
- Gujarati: વસ્તુ
- Hindi: वस्तू , चीज़
- Hungarian: dolog
- Ido: kozo
- Indonesian: benda , barang , makhluk
- Interlingua: cosa
- Irish: rud, ní
- Italian: cosa f
- Japanese: 物 (もの, mono), 事 (こと , koto)
- Latin: rēs
- Latvian: lieta
- Marathi: वस्तु (vastu)
- Norwegian: ting , dings , greie m
- Persian: چيز (čiz)
- Polish: rzecz f
- Portuguese: coisa f
- Romanian: lucru n
- Russian: вещь (vesch')
- Sanskrit: वस्तु (vastu)
- Sasxsek: kos
- Serbian: ствар (stvar)
- Spanish: cosa f
- Swedish: sak
- Tupinambá: mba'e
- Welsh: peth
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