-an

suffix
/ən/

Etymology

From Middle English -an, regularly -ain, -ein, -en, from Old French -ain, -ein, or before i, -en (modern French -ain, -en, feminine -aine, -enne), from Latin -ānus (feminine -āna), which forms adjectives of belonging or origin from a noun, being -nus [cognate with Ancient Greek -νος (-nos)] preceded by a vowel, from Proto-Indo-European *-nós. Cognate with English -en. Compare with -in, -ine.

  1. derived from *-nós
  2. derived from -ānus
  3. derived from -ain
  4. inherited from -an

Definitions

  1. Of or pertaining to

    Of or pertaining to; an adjectival suffix appended to various words, often nouns, to make an adjective form. (Often added to words of Latin origin, but also used with words of other origins. When a word ends in a, -n is used instead.)

    • Rome + -an → Roman
  2. Appended to nouns to form an agent noun. (When males with a profession are distinguished…

    Appended to nouns to form an agent noun. (When males with a profession are distinguished from females, males are -an, females -(i)enne.)

    • comedy + -an → comedian
    • history + -an → historian

The neighborhood

Vish — recursive loop

No curated loop yet for -an. Loops are being traced one word at a time while the ingestion pipeline matures.

sense glosses and etymology drawn from English Wiktionary · source · CC-BY-SA