pın

listen to the pronunciation of pın
French - Portuguese
pinho
French - Dutch
pijnboom
French - Finnish
mänty
French - Greek
πεύκο (pefko)
French - Russian
сосна

У нас в лесах Средиземноморья растут много видов деревьев: дуб, сосна, ива, ясень, вяз и другие. - Dans notre forêt méditerranéenne, il y a beaucoup de variétés d'arbres : chênes, pins, saules, frênes, ormes et autres.

French - Lehçe
sosna
French - Swedish
tall
French - Danish
fyr
French - German
Kiefer

Die Tanne, die Fichte und die Kiefer gehören zu den Nadelbäumen. - Le sapin, l'épicéa et le pin font partie des conifères.

Ein mit Kiefern bepflanzter Garten. - Un jardin planté de pins.

French - Italian
pino

Pinocchio disse: Ora il mio naso si allungherà. - Pinocchio dit : Maintenant mon nez va s'allonger.

pın

    Etymology

    [ pin ] (noun.) before 12th century. From Middle English pinne from Old English pinn (“peg, bolt”) from Proto-Germanic *pinn-, *pint- (“protruding point, peak, peg, pin, nail”) from Proto-Indo-European *bend- (“protruding object, pointed peg, nail, edge”). Akin to Old High German pfinn "pin, tack" (Bavarian pfonzer, pfunzer "sharpened point"), Old Norse pinni "peg, tack" (Danish pind "pin, pointed stick", Norwegian pinn "knitting-needle"), Middle Low German pin, pinne "pin, point, nail, peg" (German Pinne "tack, pin, peg"), Middle Dutch pin, pinne "pin, peg" (Dutch pin "peg, pin"), Old English pintel (“penis”). More at pintle. No relation to classical Latin pinna "fin, flipper, wing-like appendage, wing, feather" , which was extended to mean "ridge, peak, point" (compare pinnacle), and often confused with Latin penna (“wing, feather”). More at feather.
Favorites