yin

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English

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EnglishWikipediahas an article on:
Wikipedia

Pronunciation

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Etymology 1

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From early romanizations of ChineseÂmÂm(yīn), originally used in reference to shaded areas, as of a mountain or home.

Noun

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yin(uncountable)

  1. (philosophy)AprincipleinChineseandrelatedEast Asianphilosophiesassociatedwithdark,cool,female,etc.elementsof thenaturalworld.
    • 1956,Anthony Burgess,Time for a Tiger(The Malayan Trilogy), published1972,page187:
      "Steamed fish and chicken and vegetable soup and even mushrooms are considered cooling foods, edible materializations of theyang,the pure primal air. Theyin,or earth element, inheres in fried dishes and especially in shark's fin soup. Am I right, Mr Lee? "
    • 2017January 8, Leslie Hsu Oh, “I tried the Chinese practice of ‘sitting the month’ after childbirth”, inThe Washington Post[1],→ISSN,→OCLC,archived fromthe originalon08 January 2017,Health & Science‎[2]:
      According to traditional Chinese medicine, blood carries chi, your “life force,” which fuels all the functions of the body. When you lose blood, you lose chi, and this causes your body to go into a state ofyin(cold). Whenyin(cold) and yang (hot) are out of balance, your body will suffer physical disorders.
    • 2023November 1, Katie Hopkins, “Transitions & Remembrances”, inAlign & Spiral[3](Blog), archived fromthe originalon01 February 2024,Belief & Body Blog‎[4]:
      In ancient Chinese philosophy, the opposing forces ofYin(passive, feminine, night) and Yang (active, masculine, sun) balance life.[]
      As we turn towards darker days (from November 1st until the winter solstice's darkest night on December 21st), we have a chance to turn inward for reflection. We enter aYinphase.
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Translations
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Etymology 2

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Fromān.Doublet ofyan,yen,aneandone.

Numeral

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yin

  1. The numberone,primarily used inScotlandandUlster

Anagrams

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Aromanian

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Alternative forms

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Etymology 1

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FromLatinveniō.CompareRomanianveni,vin.

Verb

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yinfirst-singular present indicative(third-person singular present indicativeyinioryine,past participlevinitãorvinjitãorvinitã)

  1. tocome
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Etymology 2

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FromLatinvinum.CompareRomanianvin.

Alternative forms

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Noun

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yinn(pluralyinuri)

  1. wine
Derived terms
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See also

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Finnish

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Noun

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yin

  1. instructivepluralofyy

Anagrams

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French

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Etymology

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FromMandarinÂmÂm(yīn).

Pronunciation

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Noun

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yinm(usuallyuncountable,pluralyins)

  1. yin

Further reading

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Mandarin

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Romanization

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yin

  1. Nonstandardspelling ofyīn.
  2. Nonstandardspelling ofyín.
  3. Nonstandardspelling ofyǐn.
  4. Nonstandardspelling ofyìn.

Usage notes

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  • Transcriptionsof Mandarin into the Latin script often do not distinguish between the criticaltonaldifferences employed in the Mandarin language, using words such as this one without indication of tone.

Middle English

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Determiner

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yin(subjective pronounþou)

  1. Alternative form ofþin(thy)

Pronoun

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yin(subjectiveþou)

  1. (chiefly Northern and northern East Midland dialectal)Alternative form ofþin(thine)

Spanish

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Noun

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yinm(pluralyines)

  1. Alternative form ofdjinn

Further reading

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Yoruba

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Alternative forms

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Pronunciation

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Determiner

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yín

  1. your(second-person plural or honorific possessive pronoun)

See also

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Pronoun

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yín

  1. you(second-person plural object pronoun)

See also

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