Etymology of the Latin word unus
the Latin word
unus (one; alone, a single, sole)
derived from the Proto-Indo-European root
*oi-no-Derivations in Latin
unanimus,
unire,
unitas,
unicus,
unio,
adunare,
undecim,
uni-,
uncia,
uniaristata,
unifaria,
unifolia,
unilineatum,
uninervia,
uninodis,
uniplumis,
uniramosa,
unispiculata,
aliquunusDerivations in other languages
English
unipennate, English
uni-, English
uub, French
un, Portuguese
um, Portuguese
uno, Romanian
un, Spanish
uno, Spanish
unicaule, Spanish
unifoliado, Spanish
unipersonal, Spanish
unisexual, Spanish
unisonancia, Spanish
unimembreCognates
Catalan
dors, Catalan
hom, Danish
en, Dutch
één, Dutch
emmer, Dutch
een, English
cry, English
one, French
défiler, French
chandeleur, French
crier, French
deviser, French
dos, French
on, French
un, German
ein, German
Eimer, Gothic
ains, Icelandic
einn, Italian
dorso, Italian
gridare, Italian
uno, Italian
huom, Latin
dorsum, Lithuanian
defiliuoti, Norwegian
ambar, Nynorsk
enn, Portuguese
dorso, Portuguese
gritar, Portuguese
ome, Provençal
et_anc, Provençal
uns, Riksmal
en, Russian
дeфилировать, Spanish
cridar, Spanish
dorso, Spanish
un, Spanish
desfilar, Spanish
devisar, Spanish
omne, Spanish
candelor, Swedish
en, Swedish
ämbar, Yiddish
ejnUsage
Word found in Late Latin, Classical Latin