deman
See also: demán
English
Etymology
de- + man
Verb
deman (third-person singular simple present demans, present participle demanning, simple past and past participle demanned)
- (transitive) To sack employees from.
Anagrams
- Amend, Edman, Mande, Medan, ad-men, admen, amend, amend., maned, named
Interlingua
Etymology
From French demain (“tomorrow”).
Adverb
deman
- tomorrow
Antonyms
- heri
Occitan
Etymology
From Old Occitan [Term?] (compare Catalan demà), from Late Latin de māne (“of the morning”) (compare French demain, Italian domani), from de + Latin māne (“in the morning”), from Proto-Indo-European *meh₂- (“to mature, ripen”).
Adverb
deman
- tomorrow
Old English
Alternative forms
- dœ̄man
Etymology
From Proto-Germanic *dōmijaną. Cognate with Old Frisian dēma, Old Saxon dōmian, Dutch doemen, Old High German tuomen, Old Norse dœma (Danish dømme, Icelandic dæma), Gothic 𐌳𐍉𐌼𐌾𐌰𐌽 (dōmjan).
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /ˈdeːmɑn/
Verb
dēman
- (West Saxon) to judge
Conjugation
Conjugation of dēman (weak class 1)
infinitive | dēman | tō dēmenne |
---|---|---|
indicative | present | past |
1st-person singular | dēme | dēmde |
2nd-person singular | dēmest | dēmdest |
3rd-person singular | dēmeþ | dēmde |
plural | dēmaþ | dēmdon |
subjunctive | present | past |
singular | dēme | dēmde |
plural | dēmen | dēmden |
imperative | ||
singular | dēm | |
plural | dēmaþ | |
participle | present | past |
dēmende | (ġe)dēmed |
Derived terms
- ādēman
- foredēman
- fordēman
Related terms
- dōm
Descendants
- Middle English: demen
- English: deem
- Scots: deme