Name
noun · /ˈnaːmə/ ·Etymology
From Middle High German name, from Old High German namo, from Proto-West Germanic *namō. Cognate with Dutch naam, Low German Naam, Yiddish נאָמען (nomen), English name, West Frisian namme, Danish navn, Swedish namn.
Translation
- name (forename, Christian name, given name) masculine, weak
- name (surname, family name) masculine, weak
-
name (full name)
masculine, weak
Und da er keinen Grund hatte, ihr seinen Namen zu verhehlen, so stellte er sich in aller Form vor.
And because he had no reason to conceal his name from her, he introduced himself in all due form.
- noun, examples include Eigenname (proper noun), Sammelname (collective noun) and Gattungsname (appellative or common noun). Note: Compounds which aren't hyponyms of substantive are rare and obsolete, like Hauptname or Dingname (substantive noun), Beiname (adjective noun), Fürname (pronoun). in-compounds, masculine, weak
Declension
| Case | Singular | Plural |
|---|---|---|
| Nominative | Name | Namen |
| Accusative | Namen | Namen |
| Dative | Namen | Namen |
| Genitive | Namens | Namen |