among

English dictionary entry

Meanings

prep
  1. Of a person or thing: in the midst of and surrounded by (other people or things).
  2. Associated with or living alongside (other people or things).
  3. Belonging to (a group comprising similar people or things).
  4. Distinct in some way from (other members of a group); specifically, superior or pre-eminent compared to (other members of a group).
  5. Of an event or a fact.
  6. Originally, in the course of; during; now, in the circumstances or context of.
  7. Distributed or divided between (members of a group).
  8. Done jointly by (two or more people).
  9. In the general custom or opinion of (members of a group).
  10. Occurring between (members of a group) or within (a group).
adv
  1. Along with (someone or something); together.
  2. At the same time, all the while, meanwhile.
  3. In addition, beside.
  4. Chiefly with contrasting adjectives or adverbs: from time to time, now and then; also, here and there.

Pronunciation

/əˈmʌŋ/ LL-Q1860 (eng)-Naomi Persephone Amethyst (NaomiAmethyst)-among.wav En-us-among.ogg /əˈmɜŋ/ /əˈmɘ̞ŋ/ /əˈmʊŋ/ /əˈmɐ̞ŋ/ /əˈmäŋ/

Word forms

among amonge amoung

Etymology

Etymology tree Old English on Proto-Indo-European *ḱe Proto-Indo-European *ḱóm Proto-Germanic *ga- Proto-West Germanic *ga- Old English ġe- Old English mang Old English ġemang Old English onġemang Old English amang Middle English among English among The preposition is derived from Middle English among, amang, amange, amonge (“in the presence of, amid, among; in, within; between; during”), from Old English amang, onġemang (preposition), from on (“on, among, in”) (probably ultimately from Proto-Indo-European *h₂en- (“on, onto”)) + ġemang (“crowd; mixture”, noun) (from ġe- (prefix forming nouns denoting association or similarity) (ultimately from Proto-Indo-European *ḱóm (“beside, by; near; with”)) + mang- (from mængan, mengan (“to mingle, mix”); ultimately from Proto-Indo-European *menk- (“to knead; to press”))). By surface analysis, a- (prefix meaning ‘at; in; on’) + mong (“crowd, throng; group”). The adverb is derived from Middle English among, amang (“accompanied by, along with, by the side of, in association with, together; all the while, continually; also, besides; at the same time; from time to time, occasionally; meanwhile; within”), from Old English onġemang (adverb): see further above. cognates * Dutch mank, maank (“among”) * German mang (“among”) (dialectal) * German Low German mank, manken (“among”) * Saterland Frisian monk, monken (“among”) * West Frisian mank (“among”)

Translations

Afrikaans: tussen Arabic: بَيْنَ Arabic: بين Armenian: մեջ Armenian: միջև Asturian: ente Azerbaijani: arasında Belarusian: сяро́д Belarusian: памі́ж Bengali: মাঝে Bulgarian: сред Bulgarian: между́ Catalan: entre Chinese Mandarin: 其中 Chinese Mandarin: 之間 /之间 Czech: mezi Danish: mellem Danish: blandt Dutch: tussen Dutch: onder Egyptian: m-m Egyptian: Z11-m-Z4: -t:W Esperanto: inter Finnish: joukossa Finnish: keskellä Finnish: seassa French: parmi Middle French: parmy Middle French: emmy Georgian: შორის German: unter German: zwischen Gothic: 𐌹𐌽 Greek: ανάμεσα Haitian Creole: pami Hebrew: בְּתוֹךְ Hindi: के बीच में Hindi: में Hungarian: között Icelandic: meðal Ido: inter Indonesian: antara Indonesian: di antara Indonesian: dalam Indonesian: di tengah Irish: i measc Old Irish: eter Italian: tra Italian: fra Italian: in mezzo a Japanese: 中 Japanese: 間 Judeo-Italian: אֵינְפֵֿירַה Khmer: នៅក្នុង Khmer: នៅក្នុងចំណោម Korean: 가운데에 Korean: 속에 Central Kurdish: نێوان Latin: inter Latvian: starp Latvian: vidū Low German: mang Low German: mank
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