iunius

See also: Iunius

Latin

Alternative forms

Etymology

From the name of the goddess Iūnō (Juno).

Pronunciation

Adjective

iūnius (feminine iūnia, neuter iūnium); first/second-declension adjective

  1. of June
  2. Junian; proposed by Iunius

Declension

First/second-declension adjective.

Number Singular Plural
Case / Gender Masculine Feminine Neuter Masculine Feminine Neuter
Nominative iūnius iūnia iūnium iūniī iūniae iūnia
Genitive iūniī iūniae iūniī iūniōrum iūniārum iūniōrum
Dative iūniō iūniō iūniīs
Accusative iūnium iūniam iūnium iūniōs iūniās iūnia
Ablative iūniō iūniā iūniō iūniīs
Vocative iūnie iūnia iūnium iūniī iūniae iūnia

Descendants

  • Franco-Provençal: jouen
  • Gallo-Italic
    • Emilian: zógn
    • Ligurian: zûgno
    • Lombard: giügn
    • Piedmontese: giugn
  • Italo-Dalmatian
  • Old French: juin, juing
    • French: juin
    • Norman: juîn, juin, djwĩ
    • Walloon: djun
    • Middle English: juyn, juyng
      • Middle English: june (relatinized)
        • English: June (see there for further descendants)
        • Scots: Juin
  • Old Occitan:
  • Rhaeto-Romance
  • Venetian: giugno, xugno, zugno
  • West Iberian
    • Aragonese: chuño; chunio (probably semi-learned)
    • Extremaduran: juñu
    • Old Leonese:
    • Old Galician-Portuguese: junio, junyo
      • Galician: xuño
      • Portuguese: junho (see there for further descendants)
    • Old Spanish:
      • Spanish: junio (probably semi-learned) (see there for further descendants)
      • Ladino: djunio
  • Ancient Greek: Ἰούνιος (Ioúnios) (see there for further descendants)
Unsorted borrowings

These borrowings are ultimately but perhaps not directly from Latin. They are organized into geographical and language family groups, not by etymology.

See also

References

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