English

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Pronunciation

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Etymology 1

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Borrowed from Māori mana, ultimately from Proto-Polynesian *mana, from Proto-Oceanic *mana.

The use of "mana" for "magical energy" in role-playing games originated from Larry Niven, when he wrote the short story, "Not Long Before the End", in 1969. It was later popularised by his The Magic Goes Away setting.

Noun

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mana (usually uncountable, plural manas)

  1. Power, prestige; specifically, a form of supernatural energy in Polynesian religion that inheres in things or people. [from 19th c.]
    • 1862 January 25, Thomas H. Smith, chapter 4, in Appendix to the Journals of the House of Representatives of New Zealand, Wellington: House of Representatives, →OCLC, pages 10 and 12:
      They further required that a certain number of the old Chiefs should be liberally pensioned by the Government, and placed upon a footing of equality with European gentlemen of independent means, in consideration of their resigning their "mana" as Chiefs in favor of the new system []
    • 1920, Edward Carpenter, Pagan and Christian Creeds, New York: Harcourt, Brace and Co., page 61:
      The human tribe partakes of the mana or life-force of the animal, and is strengthened []
    • 1971, Keith Thomas, Religion and the Decline of Magic, London: Weidenfeld & Nicolson, OCLC 71368859; republished London: Folio Society, 2012, OCLC 805007047, page 193:
      But in popular estimation their essential virtue derived from the personal mana of the sovereign.
    • 1999, Pat Hohepa, “My Musket, My Missionary and My Mana”, in Alex Calder, Jonathan Lamb, Bridget Orr, editors, Voyages and Beaches, Honolulu: University of Hawaiʻi Press, →ISBN, page 197:
      It can be seen, therefore, that mana is a nonvisible changing measure; it can remain static, increase, or decrease, depending on the actions or inaction of the recipient, and it can be enhanced or diminished.
    • 2001 September, Aldo Matteucci, “Language and Diplomacy – A Practitioner's View”, in Jovan Kurbalija, Hannah Slavik, editors, Language and Diplomacy, Malta: DiploProjects, Mediterranean Academy of Diplomatic Studies, University of Malta, →ISBN, page 61:
      Among the Maori sovereignty was the result of mana—power based on hereditary rank and personal achievement. Manas could coexist and overlap, as they did in the medieval times in Europe.
    • 2012, Harold Hill, “Te Ope Whakaora, the Army that Brings Life”, in Hugh [Douglas] Morrison, Lachy Paterson, Brett Knowles, Murray Rae, editors, Mana Māori and Christianity, Wellington: Huia Publishers, →ISBN:
      On a number of occasions in recent years apologies have been offered to Māori because of past offences to their mana and invasions of their rights as tangata whenua.
  2. (fantasy roleplaying games) Magical energy.
    • 1969 April, Larry Niven, “Not Long Before the End”, in The Magazine of Fantasy & Science Fiction:
      Mana is the name we give to the power behind magic.
    • 1977, David Hargrave, “Magik, What It Is and What It Does” (chapter VII), in The Arduin Grimoire:
      However, all such magik requires the mages [sic] own "MANA" or "internal power" to make it work. Without the mana, a spoken spell is just so much gibberish.
    • 1993, Richard Garfield, “Overview of Play”, in Magic: The Gathering: A Fantasy Trading Card Game [rulebook][3], Limited Edition Alpha edition, Wizards of the Coast, archived from the original on 8 March 2013, page 9:
      Lands generate mana, which is required to cast spells.
    • 2003 May 20, "Bear", “Makes Lovely Julienne Ogres …”, in rec.games.roguelike.angband[4] (Usenet), message-ID <3EC9C629.4DF117C@sonic.net>:
      [] Teleporting from an open room where there were a dozen black orcs firing bows [] landed me, low on mana and hitpoints, in a room full of gnome mages who instantly summoned four umber hulks and a xorn!
    • 2010, Ernest Adams, “Artifical Life and Puzzle Games”, in Fundamentals of Game Design, 2nd edition, Berkeley, Calif.: New Riders, →ISBN, page 580:
      Mana often grows in exponential proportion to population size, so as the population increases the player acquires vastly greater powers—a progression that god games share with spellcaster characters in role-playing games.
    • 2023 December 1, Evelynn Kersting, “Games and Time”, in University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee[5], archived from the original on 7 June 2025, page 226[6], archived from the original on 6 June 2025:
      The player starts with no mana crystals, and gets one on their first turn, meaning an 8-mana card cannot be played until turn 8.
Derived terms
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Translations
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Etymology 2

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Noun

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mana (plural manas)

  1. Alternative form of mina (ancient unit of weight or currency).

Etymology 3

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Noun

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mana (uncountable)

  1. Alternative spelling of manna.

Further reading

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Anagrams

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Albanian

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Noun

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mana

  1. indefinite nominative/accusative plural of man

Bassa

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Pronunciation

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Noun

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mana

  1. a blessing

Verb

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mana

  1. to swallow

References

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Blagar

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Noun

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mana

  1. place

References

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Catalan

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Pronunciation

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Interjection

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mana

  1. sorry, pardon (I did not hear you)
    Synonym: perdó?

Verb

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mana

  1. inflection of manar:
    1. third-person singular present indicative
    2. second-person singular imperative

Cebuano

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Alternative forms

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Etymology

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From human +‎ na, literally it is finished.

Pronunciation

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  • IPA(key): /maˈna/ [mɐˈn̪a]
  • Hyphenation: ma‧na

Adjective

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maná (Badlit spelling ᜋᜈ)

  1. (colloquial) specifies that the action is finished or completed
    Mana mi'g kaon.We are done eating.
    Mana ko'g luto og utan.I am done cooking vegetables.

See also

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Central Bikol

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Pronunciation

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  • Hyphenation: ma‧na
  • IPA(key): /ˈmana/ [ˈma.n̪a]

Verb

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mana

  1. to inherit
    Synonyms: eredar, lubos

Noun

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mana (Basahan spelling ᜋᜈ)

  1. heirloom; inheritance; heritage

Derived terms

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Chavacano

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Etymology

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Possibly from the inability of Spanish speakers to pronounce the /ŋ/ sound of Hiligaynon mga (used to pluralize nouns).

Pronunciation

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  • IPA(key): /maˈna/, [maˈna]
  • Hyphenation: ma‧na

Particle

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maná

  1. alternative form of maga

Czech

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Etymology

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Borrowed from Late Latin manna.

Pronunciation

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  • IPA(key): [ˈmana]
  • Hyphenation: ma‧na
  • Rhymes: -ana

Noun

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mana f

  1. (biblical) manna

Declension

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Further reading

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Denya

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Noun

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mànǎ

  1. water

Further reading

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  • Tanyi Eyong Mbuagbaw, The Denya Noun Class System, in the Journal of West African Languages

Fijian

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Noun

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mana

  1. sign, omen
  2. miracle, wonder (use cakamana to specify this meaning)
  3. antidote (use mana kina to specify this meaning)
  4. (biblical) manna

Adverb

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mana

  1. so be it, let it be so (addressed to a heathen deity)

Finnish

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Pronunciation

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  • IPA(key): /ˈmɑnɑ/, [ˈmɑ̝nɑ̝]
  • Rhymes: -ɑnɑ
  • Syllabification(key): ma‧na
  • Hyphenation(key): ma‧na

Etymology 1

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    Probably from Proto-Finnic *mana (compare Southern Sami muonese ((good or bad) spirit, omen)). Alternatively possibly a back-formation of manala, which could then originate from maan alla (under the ground).

    Noun

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    mana

    1. death, Death (personification of death)
    Declension
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    Inflection of mana (Kotus type 9/kala, no gradation)
    nominative mana manat
    genitive manan manojen
    partitive manaa manoja
    illative manaan manoihin
    singular plural
    nominative mana manat
    accusative nom. mana manat
    gen. manan
    genitive manan manojen
    manain rare
    partitive manaa manoja
    inessive manassa manoissa
    elative manasta manoista
    illative manaan manoihin
    adessive manalla manoilla
    ablative manalta manoilta
    allative manalle manoille
    essive manana manoina
    translative manaksi manoiksi
    abessive manatta manoitta
    instructive manoin
    comitative See the possessive forms below.
    Possessive forms of mana (Kotus type 9/kala, no gradation)
    first-person singular possessor
    singular plural
    nominative manani manani
    accusative nom. manani manani
    gen. manani
    genitive manani manojeni
    manaini rare
    partitive manaani manojani
    inessive manassani manoissani
    elative manastani manoistani
    illative manaani manoihini
    adessive manallani manoillani
    ablative manaltani manoiltani
    allative manalleni manoilleni
    essive mananani manoinani
    translative manakseni manoikseni
    abessive manattani manoittani
    instructive
    comitative manoineni
    second-person singular possessor
    singular plural
    nominative manasi manasi
    accusative nom. manasi manasi
    gen. manasi
    genitive manasi manojesi
    manaisi rare
    partitive manaasi manojasi
    inessive manassasi manoissasi
    elative manastasi manoistasi
    illative manaasi manoihisi
    adessive manallasi manoillasi
    ablative manaltasi manoiltasi
    allative manallesi manoillesi
    essive mananasi manoinasi
    translative manaksesi manoiksesi
    abessive manattasi manoittasi
    instructive
    comitative manoinesi
    first-person plural possessor
    singular plural
    nominative manamme manamme
    accusative nom. manamme manamme
    gen. manamme
    genitive manamme manojemme
    manaimme rare
    partitive manaamme manojamme
    inessive manassamme manoissamme
    elative manastamme manoistamme
    illative manaamme manoihimme
    adessive manallamme manoillamme
    ablative manaltamme manoiltamme
    allative manallemme manoillemme
    essive mananamme manoinamme
    translative manaksemme manoiksemme
    abessive manattamme manoittamme
    instructive
    comitative manoinemme
    second-person plural possessor
    singular plural
    nominative mananne mananne
    accusative nom. mananne mananne
    gen. mananne
    genitive mananne manojenne
    manainne rare
    partitive manaanne manojanne
    inessive manassanne manoissanne
    elative manastanne manoistanne
    illative manaanne manoihinne
    adessive manallanne manoillanne
    ablative manaltanne manoiltanne
    allative manallenne manoillenne
    essive manananne manoinanne
    translative manaksenne manoiksenne
    abessive manattanne manoittanne
    instructive
    comitative manoinenne
    Synonyms
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    Derived terms
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    Further reading

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    Etymology 2

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      From Māori mana.

      Noun

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      mana

      1. mana
      Declension
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      Inflection of mana (Kotus type 9/kala, no gradation)
      nominative mana manat
      genitive manan manojen
      partitive manaa manoja
      illative manaan manoihin
      singular plural
      nominative mana manat
      accusative nom. mana manat
      gen. manan
      genitive manan manojen
      manain rare
      partitive manaa manoja
      inessive manassa manoissa
      elative manasta manoista
      illative manaan manoihin
      adessive manalla manoilla
      ablative manalta manoilta
      allative manalle manoille
      essive manana manoina
      translative manaksi manoiksi
      abessive manatta manoitta
      instructive manoin
      comitative See the possessive forms below.
      Possessive forms of mana (Kotus type 9/kala, no gradation)
      first-person singular possessor
      singular plural
      nominative manani manani
      accusative nom. manani manani
      gen. manani
      genitive manani manojeni
      manaini rare
      partitive manaani manojani
      inessive manassani manoissani
      elative manastani manoistani
      illative manaani manoihini
      adessive manallani manoillani
      ablative manaltani manoiltani
      allative manalleni manoilleni
      essive mananani manoinani
      translative manakseni manoikseni
      abessive manattani manoittani
      instructive
      comitative manoineni
      second-person singular possessor
      singular plural
      nominative manasi manasi
      accusative nom. manasi manasi
      gen. manasi
      genitive manasi manojesi
      manaisi rare
      partitive manaasi manojasi
      inessive manassasi manoissasi
      elative manastasi manoistasi
      illative manaasi manoihisi
      adessive manallasi manoillasi
      ablative manaltasi manoiltasi
      allative manallesi manoillesi
      essive mananasi manoinasi
      translative manaksesi manoiksesi
      abessive manattasi manoittasi
      instructive
      comitative manoinesi
      first-person plural possessor
      singular plural
      nominative manamme manamme
      accusative nom. manamme manamme
      gen. manamme
      genitive manamme manojemme
      manaimme rare
      partitive manaamme manojamme
      inessive manassamme manoissamme
      elative manastamme manoistamme
      illative manaamme manoihimme
      adessive manallamme manoillamme
      ablative manaltamme manoiltamme
      allative manallemme manoillemme
      essive mananamme manoinamme
      translative manaksemme manoiksemme
      abessive manattamme manoittamme
      instructive
      comitative manoinemme
      second-person plural possessor
      singular plural
      nominative mananne mananne
      accusative nom. mananne mananne
      gen. mananne
      genitive mananne manojenne
      manainne rare
      partitive manaanne manojanne
      inessive manassanne manoissanne
      elative manastanne manoistanne
      illative manaanne manoihinne
      adessive manallanne manoillanne
      ablative manaltanne manoiltanne
      allative manallenne manoillenne
      essive manananne manoinanne
      translative manaksenne manoiksenne
      abessive manattanne manoittanne
      instructive
      comitative manoinenne

      Further reading

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      Anagrams

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      French

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      Pronunciation

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      Noun

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      mana m (plural manas)

      1. (religion) mana

      Further reading

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      Garo

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      Verb

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      mana

      1. to rebuke

      Hadza

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      Pronunciation

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      Noun

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      mana m

      1. a piece of meat

      See also manako (meat), manabee (body), manae (to go to where there is meat)

      Hawaiian

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      Pronunciation

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      • IPA(key): /ˈma.na/, [ˈmɐ.nə]

      Etymology 1

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      From Proto-Polynesian *mana, from Proto-Oceanic *mana.

      Noun

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      mana

      1. mana (religious or spiritual power)
      2. power, authority

      Verb

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      mana(stative)

      1. having mana; divinely powerful, spiritual
      Derived terms
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      Etymology 2

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      From Proto-Polynesian *maŋa (branch, fork). Cognate with Māori manga (tree branch).

      Noun

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      mana

      1. (of a tree) crotch, branch
      2. crosspiece
      3. branch (of a road, river, etc.)
      4. variant, version

      Verb

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      mana

      1. (stative) branching, forking
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      Further reading

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      Icelandic

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      Pronunciation

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      Etymology 1

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      Ultimately from Proto-Germanic *manōną. Possibly borrowed through Middle Low German or German mahnen (to urge).

      Verb

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      mana (weak verb, third-person singular past indicative manaði, supine manað)

      1. to dare (someone to do something)
      Conjugation
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      mana – active voice (germynd)
      infinitive nafnháttur mana
      supine sagnbót manað
      present participle
      manandi
      indicative
      subjunctive
      present
      past
      present
      past
      singular ég mana manaði mani manaði
      þú manar manaðir manir manaðir
      hann, hún, það manar manaði mani manaði
      plural við mönum mönuðum mönum mönuðum
      þið manið mönuðuð manið mönuðuð
      þeir, þær, þau mana mönuðu mani mönuðu
      imperative boðháttur
      singular þú mana (þú), manaðu
      plural þið manið (þið), maniði1
      1 Spoken form, usually not written; in writing, the unappended plural form (optionally followed by the full pronoun) is preferred.
      manast – mediopassive voice (miðmynd)
      infinitive nafnháttur manast
      supine sagnbót manast
      present participle
      manandist (rare; see appendix)
      indicative
      subjunctive
      present
      past
      present
      past
      singular ég manast manaðist manist manaðist
      þú manast manaðist manist manaðist
      hann, hún, það manast manaðist manist manaðist
      plural við mönumst mönuðumst mönumst mönuðumst
      þið manist mönuðust manist mönuðust
      þeir, þær, þau manast mönuðust manist mönuðust
      imperative boðháttur
      singular þú manast (þú), manastu
      plural þið manist (þið), manisti1
      1 Spoken form, usually not written; in writing, the unappended plural form (optionally followed by the full pronoun) is preferred.
      manaður — past participle (lýsingarháttur þátíðar)
      strong declension
      (sterk beyging)
      singular (eintala) plural (fleirtala)
      masculine
      (karlkyn)
      feminine
      (kvenkyn)
      neuter
      (hvorugkyn)
      masculine
      (karlkyn)
      feminine
      (kvenkyn)
      neuter
      (hvorugkyn)
      nominative
      (nefnifall)
      manaður mönuð manað manaðir manaðar mönuð
      accusative
      (þolfall)
      manaðan manaða manað manaða manaðar mönuð
      dative
      (þágufall)
      mönuðum manaðri mönuðu mönuðum mönuðum mönuðum
      genitive
      (eignarfall)
      manaðs manaðrar manaðs manaðra manaðra manaðra
      weak declension
      (veik beyging)
      singular (eintala) plural (fleirtala)
      masculine
      (karlkyn)
      feminine
      (kvenkyn)
      neuter
      (hvorugkyn)
      masculine
      (karlkyn)
      feminine
      (kvenkyn)
      neuter
      (hvorugkyn)
      nominative
      (nefnifall)
      manaði manaða manaða mönuðu mönuðu mönuðu
      accusative
      (þolfall)
      manaða mönuðu manaða mönuðu mönuðu mönuðu
      dative
      (þágufall)
      manaða mönuðu manaða mönuðu mönuðu mönuðu
      genitive
      (eignarfall)
      manaða mönuðu manaða mönuðu mönuðu mönuðu

      Etymology 2

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      Borrowed from English mana, from Proto-Polynesian *mana, from Proto-Oceanic *mana.

      Noun

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      mana n (genitive singular mana, no plural)

      1. (gaming, role playing) mana
      Declension
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      Declension of mana (sg-only neuter)
      singular
      indefinite definite
      nominative mana manað
      accusative mana manað
      dative mana mananu
      genitive mana manans

      Indonesian

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      Pronunciation

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      Etymology 1

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      Inherited from Malay mana.

      Pronoun

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      mana

      1. where, which

      Adverb

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      mana

      1. where, which
      2. (colloquial, in some contexts only) not, doesn't (negates meaning of verb)
      Derived terms
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      Affixations
      Compounds

      Etymology 2

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      Learned borrowing from Māori mana, ultimately from Proto-Polynesian *mana, from Proto-Oceanic *mana.

      Noun

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      mana (plural mana-mana)

      1. mana: A form of supernatural energy in Polynesian religion that inheres in things or people

      Etymology 3

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      Learned borrowing from Biblical Hebrew מן (mān, 'manna).

      Noun

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      mana (plural mana-mana)

      1. (biblical) manna: Food miraculously produced for the Israelites in the desert in the book of Exodus

      Further reading

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      Irish

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      Etymology

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      From Old Irish manadh, from a Proto-Celtic derivative of Proto-Indo-European *men- (to think), the source of Latin moneo (to advise, warn).[1]

      Noun

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      mana m (genitive singular mana, nominative plural manaí)

      1. portent, sign
      2. attitude, outlook
      3. motto

      Declension

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      Declension of mana (fourth declension)
      bare forms
      singular plural
      nominative mana manaí
      vocative a mhana a mhanaí
      genitive mana manaí
      dative mana manaí
      forms with the definite article
      singular plural
      nominative an mana na manaí
      genitive an mhana na manaí
      dative leis an mana
      don mhana
      leis na manaí

      Mutation

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      Mutated forms of mana
      radical lenition eclipsis
      mana mhana not applicable

      Note: Certain mutated forms of some words can never occur in standard Modern Irish.
      All possible mutated forms are displayed for convenience.

      References

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      1. ^ MacBain, Alexander; Mackay, Eneas (1911), “manadh”, in An Etymological Dictionary of the Gaelic Language[1], Stirling, →ISBN, page 241

      Further reading

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      Italian

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      Etymology 1

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      From mano, with a vowel change by analogy of the word's gender. Compare Neapolitan mana, Romanian mână.

      Noun

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      mana f (plural mane)

      1. (regional) alternative form of mano

      Etymology 2

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        Borrowed from English mana.

        Noun

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        mana m (uncountable)

        1. (fantasy roleplaying games) mana

        Italiot Greek

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        Pronunciation

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          This entry needs pronunciation information. If you are familiar with the IPA then please add some!

        Noun

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        mana f

        1. mother

        Japanese

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        Romanization

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        mana

        1. Rōmaji transcription of まな
        2. Rōmaji transcription of マナ

        Latin

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        Pronunciation

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        Verb

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        mānā

        1. second-person singular present active imperative of mānō

        Latvian

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        Pronoun

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        mana

        1. inflection of mans:
          1. genitive singular masculine
          2. nominative/vocative singular feminine

        Verb

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        mana

        1. third-person singular/plural present indicative of manīt
        2. (with the particle lai) third-person singular imperative of manīt
        3. (with the particle lai) third-person plural imperative of manīt

        Conjunction

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        mana

        1. Latin spelling of მანა (mana)

        Macanese

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        Noun

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        mana

        1. alternative form of mána: older / oldest sister

        Malay

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        Alternative forms

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        Etymology

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        (This etymology is missing or incomplete. Please add to it, or discuss it at the Etymology scriptorium.)

        Pronunciation

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        Adverb

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        mana (Jawi spelling مان)

        1. where (incomplete without ke, di or dari)

        Pronoun

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        mana (Jawi spelling مان)

        1. which (used with yang)
          Baju yang mana satu pilihan hati?Which shirt is the one of your choice?
        2. any; whatever.
          Ambillah mana yang awak suka.Take whichever (any that) you like.

        Usage notes

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        Occurs in the following constructions: di mana? (where?), dari mana? (whence? from where?), ke mana? (whither?, to where?), macam mana? (how?) and yang mana? (which (one)?).

        Derived terms

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        Affixations
        Compounds

        Descendants

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        • > Indonesian: mana (inherited)

        Further reading

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        Māori

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        Etymology

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        From Proto-Polynesian *mana, from Proto-Oceanic *mana.

        Pronunciation

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        Noun

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        mana

        1. power; mana
          • 2006, Joanne Barker, Sovereignty Matters, page 208:
            Ko te reo te mauri o te mana Maori.
            The language is the life principle of Maori mana.

        Descendants

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        Middle Norwegian

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        Etymology

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        From Middle Low German [Term?].

        Verb

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        mana

        1. to encourage, urge

        Descendants

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        • Norwegian Nynorsk: mana, mane (e infinitive)
        • Norwegian Bokmål: mane

        References

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        Nafaanra

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        Noun

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        mana

        1. nose

        Neapolitan

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        Alternative forms

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        Etymology

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        Inherited from Latin manus, from Proto-Italic *manus.

        Pronunciation

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        • (Naples) IPA(key): /ˈma.nə/, [ˈmɑːnɐ]

        Noun

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        mana f (plural mmane)

        1. hand

        Northern Sami

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        Pronunciation

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        • (Kautokeino) IPA(key): /ˈmana/

        Verb

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        mana

        1. inflection of mannat:
          1. present indicative connegative
          2. second-person singular imperative
          3. imperative connegative

        Norwegian Nynorsk

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        Etymology 1

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        From Middle Norwegian mana, from Middle Low German [Term?].

        Alternative forms

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        Verb

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        mana (present tense manar, past tense mana, past participle mana, passive infinitive manast, present participle manande, imperative mana/man)

        1. to encourage, urge

        Etymology 2

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        See the etymology of the corresponding lemma form.

        Noun

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        mana

        1. definite singular of man

        References

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        Old English

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        Noun

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        mana

        1. genitive plural of man

        Old Norse

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        Noun

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        mana

        1. indefinite genitive plural of mǫn

        Oromo

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        Etymology

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        From Proto-Cushitic *min- (house, to build). Cognates include Burji mina, Hadiyya mine and Sidamo mine. Compare also Egyptian jmn (to create).

        Noun

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        mana

        1. house

        Pali

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        Alternative forms

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        Noun

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        mana m or n

        1. Interpretation of many of the inflectional forms of manas (mind)
        2. vocative singular of manas

        Polish

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        Polish Wikipedia has an article on:
        Wikipedia pl

        Etymology

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        Borrowed from Māori mana, from Proto-Polynesian *mana, from Proto-Oceanic *mana.

        Pronunciation

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        • IPA(key): /ˈma.na/
        • Audio:(file)
        • Rhymes: -ana
        • Syllabification: ma‧na

        Noun

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        mana f

        1. mana (form of supernatural energy in Polynesian religion that inheres in things or people)
        2. (fantasy roleplaying games) mana (magical power)

        Declension

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        Further reading

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        • mana”, in Polish dictionaries at PWN[9] (in Polish)

        Portuguese

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        Pronunciation

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        • Rhymes: -ɐnɐ
        • Hyphenation: ma‧na

        Etymology 1

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        Borrowed from Spanish mana, clipping of hermana (sister).

        Noun

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        mana f (plural manas)

        1. (colloquial, familiar) female equivalent of mano: sister

        Etymology 2

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        Portuguese Wikipedia has an article on:
        Wikipedia pt

        Borrowed from English mana, from Māori mana.

        Noun

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        mana m or f (uncountable)

        1. (religion) mana (form of supernatural energy in Polynesian religion)
        2. (fantasy roleplaying games) mana (magical power)

        Etymology 3

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        See the etymology of the corresponding lemma form.

        Verb

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        mana

        1. inflection of manar:
          1. third-person singular present indicative
          2. second-person singular imperative

        Further reading

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        Quechua

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        Particle

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        mana

        1. not
        2. no
          Antonym: arí (yes)

        See also

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        Rapa Nui

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        Etymology

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        From Proto-Polynesian *mana, from Proto-Oceanic *mana.

        Noun

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        mana

        1. power
        2. divine authority

        Sambali

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        Noun

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        mana

        1. heritage

        Samoan

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        Etymology

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        From Proto-Polynesian *mana, from Proto-Oceanic *mana.

        Noun

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        mana

        1. mana (religious or spiritual power)

        Derived terms

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        References

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        • Milner, G.B. (1993), Samoan Dictionary, Auckland: Polynesian Press, →ISBN, page 128

        Scottish Gaelic

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        Alternative forms

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        Etymology

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        From Old Irish mani (if not, unless)[1], the negative form of (if).

        Pronunciation

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        Conjunction

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        mana

        1. not, unless

        Usage notes

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        • This is the negative form of the conjunctions ma (if).
        • Also used as the negative form of conjunctions nan/nam ("if" in conditional clauses).
        • This conjunction is followed by the dependent form of the verb, which distinguishes it from the otherwise very similarly pronounced man (as, like).

        References

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        1. ^ Gregory Toner, Sharon Arbuthnot, Máire Ní Mhaonaigh, Marie-Luise Theuerkauf, Dagmar Wodtko, editors (2019), “mana”, in eDIL: Electronic Dictionary of the Irish Language
        2. ^ Borgstrøm, Carl Hj. (1940), A linguistic survey of the Gaelic dialects of Scotland, Vol. I: The dialects of the Outer Hebrides, Oslo: Norsk Tidsskrift for Sprogvidenskap, page 109
        3. ^ Holmer, Nils M. (1938), Studies on Argyllshire Gaelic, Uppsala: Almqvist & Wiksells boktryckeri-A.-B., page 194

        Serbo-Croatian

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        Etymology 1

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        From a dialectal vulgarism of Ottoman Turkish بهانه (bahane), either in the form of "mahane" or "mana",[1] from Persian بهانه (bahâne, excuse). Related to Macedonian маана (maana), Bulgarian махана (mahana), Albanian mahanë - all borrowed from Ottoman Turkish.

        Pronunciation

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        Noun

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        mána f (Cyrillic spelling ма́на)

        1. flaw, fault, shortcoming
        Declension
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        Declension of mana
        singular plural
        nominative mana mane
        genitive mane mana
        dative mani manama
        accusative manu mane
        vocative mano mane
        locative mani manama
        instrumental manom manama
        Derived terms
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        References

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        1. ^ Redhouse, James W. (1890), “بهانه”, in A Turkish and English Lexicon[2], Constantinople: A. H. Boyajian, page 415

        Etymology 2

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        From Latin manna, from Ancient Greek μάννα (mánna), from Hebrew מן (mān, 'manna).

        Pronunciation

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        • IPA(key): /mâna/
        • Hyphenation: ma‧na

        Noun

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        mȁna f (Cyrillic spelling ма̏на)

        1. manna
        Declension
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        Declension of mana
        singular plural
        nominative mana mane
        genitive mane mana
        dative mani manama
        accusative manu mane
        vocative mano mane
        locative mani manama
        instrumental manom manama

        Etymology 3

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        Borrowed from English mana, from Proto-Polynesian *mana, from Proto-Oceanic *mana.

        Pronunciation

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        • IPA(key): /mâna/
        • Hyphenation: ma‧na

        Noun

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        mȁna f (Cyrillic spelling ма̏на)

        1. mana
        Declension
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        Declension of mana
        singular plural
        nominative mana mane
        genitive mane mana
        dative mani manama
        accusative manu mane
        vocative mano mane
        locative mani manama
        instrumental manom manama

        Spanish

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        Pronunciation

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        • IPA(key): /ˈmana/ [ˈma.na]
        • Rhymes: -ana
        • Syllabification: ma‧na

        Etymology 1

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        Noun

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        mana f (plural manas)

        1. (slang, Mexico) female equivalent of mano

        Etymology 2

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        Verb

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        mana

        1. inflection of manar:
          1. third-person singular present indicative
          2. second-person singular imperative

        Etymology 3

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        Noun

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        mana f (plural manas)

        1. manna

        Etymology 4

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        Noun

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        mana f (plural manas)

        1. spring (of water)

        Further reading

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        Swedish

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        Etymology

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        From Low German manen, from Old Saxon manon, from Proto-Germanic *manōną, cognate with Old English manian (to remind).

        Verb

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        mana (present manar, preterite manade, supine manat, imperative mana)

        1. to encourage or urge (someone)

        Conjugation

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        Conjugation of mana (weak)
        active passive
        infinitive mana manas
        supine manat manats
        imperative mana
        imper. plural1 manen
        present past present past
        indicative manar manade manas manades
        ind. plural1 mana manade manas manades
        subjunctive2 mane manade manes manades
        present participle manande
        past participle manad

        1 Archaic. 2 Dated. See the appendix on Swedish verbs.

        Derived terms

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        Noun

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        mana c

        1. mana (supernatural power)

        Declension

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        Declension of mana
        nominative genitive
        singular indefinite mana manas
        definite manan manans
        plural indefinite
        definite

        References

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        Tagalog

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        Etymology

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        Inherited from Proto-Malayo-Polynesian *mana, *maña (inherit; inheritance). Compare Malay manah (heritage).

        Pronunciation

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        Noun

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        mana (Baybayin spelling ᜋᜈ)

        1. heirloom; inheritance; heritage

        Derived terms

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        Further reading

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        • mana”, in Pambansang Diksiyonaryo | Diksiyonaryo.ph, 2018

        Anagrams

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        Tahitian

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        Etymology

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        From Proto-Polynesian *mana, from Proto-Oceanic *mana.

        Noun

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        mana

        1. power
        2. respect given in accordance to power

        Tongan

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        Etymology

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        From Proto-Polynesian *mana, from Proto-Oceanic *mana.

        Pronunciation

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        Noun

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        mana

        1. miracle

        Tunggare

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        Noun

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        mana

        1. water

        References

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        • C. L. Voorhoeve, 1975. Languages of Irian Jaya Checklist, Canberra: Pacific Linguistics, p.120
        • Bill Palmer, editor (2018), The Languages and Linguistics of the New Guinea Area: A Comprehensive Guide, Padua: De Gruyter Mouton, →OCLC

        Turkish

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        Etymology

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        Inherited from Ottoman Turkish معنا, from Arabic مَعْنًى (maʕnan) (plural: مَعَانٍ (maʕānin)).

        Pronunciation

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        • IPA(key): /maːˈnaː/, /maːˈna/, [mɑːɲäː], (deprecated) [mɑːnɑː]
        • Audio:(file)

        Noun

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        mana (definite accusative manayı, plural manalar)

        1. meaning
          Synonym: anlam
        2. purpose, point
          bu tartışmanın pek bir manası yokthis discussion does not really have a point

        Declension

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        Declension of mana
        singular plural
        nominative mana manalar
        definite accusative manayı manaları
        dative manaya manalara
        locative manada manalarda
        ablative manadan manalardan
        genitive mananın manaların
        Possessive forms
        nominative
        singular plural
        1st singular manam manalarım
        2nd singular manan manaların
        3rd singular manası manaları
        1st plural manamız manalarımız
        2nd plural mananız manalarınız
        3rd plural manaları manaları
        definite accusative
        singular plural
        1st singular manamı manalarımı
        2nd singular mananı manalarını
        3rd singular manasını manalarını
        1st plural manamızı manalarımızı
        2nd plural mananızı manalarınızı
        3rd plural manalarını manalarını
        dative
        singular plural
        1st singular manama manalarıma
        2nd singular manana manalarına
        3rd singular manasına manalarına
        1st plural manamıza manalarımıza
        2nd plural mananıza manalarınıza
        3rd plural manalarına manalarına
        locative
        singular plural
        1st singular manamda manalarımda
        2nd singular mananda manalarında
        3rd singular manasında manalarında
        1st plural manamızda manalarımızda
        2nd plural mananızda manalarınızda
        3rd plural manalarında manalarında
        ablative
        singular plural
        1st singular manamdan manalarımdan
        2nd singular manandan manalarından
        3rd singular manasından manalarından
        1st plural manamızdan manalarımızdan
        2nd plural mananızdan manalarınızdan
        3rd plural manalarından manalarından
        genitive
        singular plural
        1st singular manamın manalarımın
        2nd singular mananın manalarının
        3rd singular manasının manalarının
        1st plural manamızın manalarımızın
        2nd plural mananızın manalarınızın
        3rd plural manalarının manalarının
        Predicative forms
        singular plural
        1st singular manayım manalarım
        2nd singular manasın manalarsın
        3rd singular mana
        manadır
        manalar
        manalardır
        1st plural manayız manalarız
        2nd plural manasınız manalarsınız
        3rd plural manalar manalardır

        Derived terms

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        Further reading

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        Volapük

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        Noun

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        mana

        1. genitive singular of man

        Xavante

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        Etymology

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        From Proto-Central Jê *mə̃nə̃ (tail, penis) < Proto-Cerrado *mbyn (tail, penis) < Proto-Jê *mbyn (tail).

        Pronunciation

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        Noun

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        mana

        1. Form of (utterance-medial variant)

        Yawa

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        Noun

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        mana

        1. water

        References

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        • Andrew Pawley, Papuan Pasts: Cultural, Linguistic and Biological Histories of Papuan-Speaking Peoples (2005)