omma
التعريفات والمعاني
== Cornish ==
=== Alternative forms ===
obma
=== Etymology ===
From Middle Cornish om(m)a, from Proto-Celtic *uman. Comparable to Welsh yma.
=== Adverb ===
omma
here (in or to this place)
== Estonian ==
=== Noun ===
omma
illative singular of oma
== Faroese ==
=== Etymology ===
From Old Norse amma, from Proto-Germanic *ammǭ.
=== Noun ===
omma f (genitive singular ommu, plural ommur)
grandmother
==== Declension ====
== Old Frisian ==
=== Alternative forms ===
amma
andema, ondema
=== Etymology ===
Possibly from a lost verb *ondia (“to breathe”) + -ma (agentive suffix), literally “breather”, this is from Proto-West Germanic *anadōn, from Proto-Germanic *anadōną (“to exhale, breathe”), related to Old Norse anda (“to breathe, live”). In the other West Germanic languages, the meaning of *anadōn has shifted: Old High German antōn (“to act against”), Old English andian (“to envy”).
Alternatively, from a Proto-West Germanic *ammō, from Proto-Germanic *ammô, *anmô, from *ananą (“to breathe”) + *-mô (agentive suffix, an earlier form of Old Frisian -ma), connecting it with Latin animus and Proto-Celtic *anaman.
A third etymology derives this word from *āmma, *āthma, variants of Old Frisian ēthma, ādema, from Proto-West Germanic *āþmō, *āþm (“breathing; breath”), from Proto-Germanic *ēþmaz (“breath, breathing”). If so, then cognate with Old English ǣþm (“breath”), Old Saxon āthom (“breath”).
=== Noun ===
omma m
breath
spirit
==== Descendants ====
North Frisian: ome
Saterland Frisian: Omme
West Frisian: amme
==== References ====
== Uzbek ==
=== Etymology ===
Borrowed from Classical Persian عَامَّه (āmma, “public, populace, common people”), from Arabic عَامَّة (ʕāmma, “most general part of; common people”).
=== Noun ===
omma (plural ommalar)
public, mass, audience
== Yogad ==
=== Conjunction ===
omma
or