出典:Wiktionary
出典:『Wiktionary』 (2026/04/29 16:38 UTC 版)
From Latin anemōnē, from Ancient Greek ἀνεμώνη (anemṓnē), from ἄνεμος (ánemos, “wind”) + matronymic suffix -ώνη (-ṓnē, “daughter of”).
Or from Phoenician *𐤍𐤏𐤌𐤍 (*nʿmn), akin to Arabic شَقَائِق اَلنُّعْمَان (šaqāʔiq an-nuʕmān, “anemones”) and Hebrew (Isaiah Scroll) נִטְעֵי נַעֲמָנִים (nit'ei na'amanim, “plants of pleasantness”).
From Ancient Greek ἀνεμώνη (anemṓnē). Pliny says it was so called because the flowers opened only when the wind blew.
anemōnē f (genitive anemōnēs); first declension
First-declension noun (feminine, Greek-type, nominative singular in -ē).
| singular | plural | |
|---|---|---|
| nominative | anemōnē | anemōnae |
| genitive | anemōnēs | anemōnārum |
| dative | anemōnae | anemōnīs |
| accusative | anemōnēn | anemōnās |
| ablative | anemōnē | anemōnīs |
| vocative | anemōnē | anemōnae |
![]()
名詞の変化形:
|