From Latin ōmen (“foreboding, omen”).
omen (plural omens)
- Something which portends or is perceived to portend either a good or evil event or circumstance in the future, or which causes a foreboding; a portent or augury.
The ghost's appearance was an ill omen.
A rise in imports might be an omen of economic recovery.
The egg has, during the span of history, represented mystery, magic, medicine, food and omen.
1856, Gustave Flaubert, chapter 10, in Eleanor Marx-Aveling, transl., Madame Bovary, Part 3:Day broke. He saw three black hens asleep in a tree. He shuddered, horrified at this omen. Then he promised the Holy Virgin three chasubles for the church, and that he would go barefooted from the cemetery at Bertaux to the chapel of Vassonville.
- A thing of prophetic significance.
A sign of ill omen.
- augury, auspice, forecast, foreshadowing, foretoken, forewarning, harbinger, herald, hint, indication, oracle, portent, prediction, presage, prophecy, sign, signal, token, warning; danger sign, straw in the wind, (hand)writing on the wall; see also Thesaurus:omen
Collocations
- Adjectives often applied to "omen": good, ill, bad, auspicious, evil, favorable, happy, lucky.
something which portends or is perceived to portend a good or evil event or circumstance in the future; an augury or foreboding
- Arabic: فَأل (ar), نَذِيْر (naḏiyr), طالِع (ṭāliʕ)
- Bulgarian: поличба (bg) f (poličba), знамение (bg) n (znamenie)
- Catalan: presagi (ca) m, averany (ca) m, auguri (ca) m, auspici (ca) m
- Cherokee: (bad omen) ᎤᏓᎴᎯ (udalehi)
- Chinese:
- Mandarin: 預兆/预兆 (zh) (yùzhào)
- Czech: znamení (cs) n
- Dutch: voorteken (nl) n
- Esperanto: antaŭsigno, omeno
- Finnish: enne (fi)
- French: présage (fr) m
- Galician: agoiro (gl) m, sinal (gl) m
- German: Omen (de) n
- Greek: οιωνός (el) m (oionós), σημάδι (el) n (simádi)
- Ancient: οἰωνός m (oiōnós), κληδών f (klēdṓn)
- Ingrian: sanoma
- Irish: mana (ga) m, tuar (ga) m, droch-tuar m (unlucky), teir f (evil omen)
- Italian: presagio (it) m, segno (it) m, auspicio (it) m, augurio (it) m, premonizione (it) f, presentimento (it) m
- Lao: please add this translation if you can
- Latin: omen n, praenuntia f
- Maori: takiari, tūpō (refers to bad omen), kōara (refers to bad omen), inati (usually heralds misfortune)
- Marathi: शकुन m (śakun)
- Middle Persian: [Book Pahlavi needed] (ytk /ǰadag/), [Book Pahlavi needed] (yhyšn' /ǰahišn/), [Book Pahlavi needed] (mwlwʾk' /murwāg/)
- Norman: avèrti m
- Norwegian: omen n
- Old English: wyrd
- Ottoman Turkish: اوغور (uğur) (a favorable one)
- Persian: مروا (fa) (morvâ), فال (fa) (fâl), مرغوا (fa) (morğvâ)
- Plautdietsch: Bediedunk f
- Portuguese: augúrio (pt) m, agouro (pt) m, presságio (pt) m, vaticínio (pt) m
- Russian: зна́мение (ru) (známenije), предзнаменова́ние (ru) n (predznamenovánije)
- Spanish: presagio (es) m
- Swedish: omen (sv) n, järtecken (sv)
- Tagalog: pangitain
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Translations to be checked
omen (third-person singular simple present omens, present participle omening, simple past and past participle omened)
- (transitive) To be an omen of.
- (intransitive) To divine or predict from omens.
- prognosticate, betoken, forecast, foretell, portend, foreshadow, bode, augur, prefigure, predict, auspicate, presage
- “omen”, in Webster’s Revised Unabridged Dictionary, Springfield, Mass.: G. & C. Merriam, 1913, →OCLC.
- “omen”, in The Century Dictionary […], New York, N.Y.: The Century Co., 1911, →OCLC.
- Nemo, meno-, mone, Meno, nemo, Nome, Moen, nome, meon, Meon, Mone, Emon, NEMO
Uncertain, perhaps from Latin ōmen (“omen”), but the semantic shift is problematic. If it's not a borrowing, from something akin to Proto-Basque *oben.[1]
- IPA(key): /omen/ [o.mẽn]
- Rhymes: -omen
- Hyphenation: o‧men
omen inan
- fame, renown
Declension of omen (inanimate, ending in consonant)
omen
- reportedly, apparently, I think
- Eguraldia hobetu omen da. ― It seems like the weather has improved.
In Basque, yes/no questions require a modal particle. The most common one is al, which introduces no additional meaning. For tentative questions, ote is used. The related particle omen indicates hearsay, but it's not used to form direct questions. All these particles are placed immediately before (auxiliary) verb forms.
- “omen”, in Euskaltzaindiaren Hiztegia [Dictionary of the Basque Academy], Euskaltzaindia
- “omen”, in Orotariko Euskal Hiztegia [General Basque Dictionary], Euskaltzaindia, 1987–2005
From Old Latin osmen, of uncertain origin, with many origins proposed:
- Ancient authors derived it from ōs (“mouth”).
- Derived from Proto-Indo-European *h₂ew- (“to see, perceive”) (whence audiō)[1] or from Proto-Indo-European *h₂ew- (“to perceive”), whence Ancient Greek οἴομαι (oíomai, “I think, believe, suppose”).[2]
- Per Beneviste and Oettinger, connected to Hittite [script needed] (hā-ᶻᶦ, “to believe, trust”) via a supposed Proto-Indo-European *h₂e/oh₃-s-mn (“trust”). De Vaan considers this semantically unconvincing.[3]
- Per De Vaan (who doubts the authenticity of the Old Latin form osmen), most likely from Proto-Italic *okʷsmn- (“sighting, omen”), from an s-present form of Proto-Indo-European *h₃ekʷ- (“to see; eye”) + *-men (whence -men).[3]
- An alternative theory by Meier-Brügger derives the word from Proto-Indo-European *Hoģ-smen (“speech, what was predicted”), from an o-grade of Proto-Indo-European *h₁eǵ- (“to say”) (whence aiō (“id”)). This is semantically attractive, but requires the existence of the otherwise unattested-in-Latin o-grade of aiō, as well as an atypical formation of a smen-derivative from the Proto-Indo-European perfect *He-Hoǵ-.[3]
ōmen n (genitive ōminis); third declension
- omen, sign, harbinger, portent, token (an object or occurrence believed to portend or predict a future event, circumstance, situation, or state of affairs)
- Synonym: ōrāculum
45 BCE,
Cicero,
De divinatione 1.46.104:
- […] Quod omen res consecuta est; ipsa enim brevi mortua est, virgo autem nupsit, cui Caecilia nupta fuerat. Haec posse contemni vel etiam rideri praeclare intellego, sed id ipsum est deos non putare, quae ab iis significantur, contemnere.
- […] And this was a sign of what came to pass, for in a short time Caecilia died and the girl married her aunt's husband. I realize perfectly well that these omens may be lightly regarded and even be laughed at, but to make light of signs sent by the gods is nothing less than to disbelieve in the existence of the gods.
~101 CE,
Juvenal,
Satires 4.123–125:
- non cedit Veiiento, sed ut fanaticus oestro / percussus, Bellona, tuo diuinat et "ingens / omen habes" inquit "magni clarique triumphi..."
- Veiientus yields not, but as one inspired by the maddening / influence of the goddess Bellona, prophesies. "A mighty / token this you possess" he says "of some great and illustrious triumph..."
Third-declension noun (neuter, imparisyllabic non-i-stem).
- “omen”, in Charlton T. Lewis and Charles Short (1879) A Latin Dictionary, Oxford: Clarendon Press
- “omen”, in Charlton T. Lewis (1891) An Elementary Latin Dictionary, New York: Harper & Brothers
- omen in Charles du Fresne du Cange’s Glossarium Mediæ et Infimæ Latinitatis (augmented edition with additions by D. P. Carpenterius, Adelungius and others, edited by Léopold Favre, 1883–1887)
- omen in Gaffiot, Félix (1934) Dictionnaire illustré latin-français, Hachette.
- Carl Meißner, Henry William Auden (1894) Latin Phrase-Book[1], London: Macmillan and Co.
- to wish prosperity to an undertaking: aliquid optimis ominibus prosequi (vid. sect. VI. 11., note Prosequi...)
- and may heaven avert the omen! heaven preserve us from this: quod di immortales omen avertant! (Phil. 44. 11)
- to accept as a happy omen: omen accipere (opp. improbare)
- to interpret something as an omen: accipere, vertere aliquid in omen
- with favourable omens: faustis ominibus
- an evil omen; presage of ill: omen infaustum, triste
- “omen”, in Harry Thurston Peck, editor (1898), Harper's Dictionary of Classical Antiquities, New York: Harper & Brothers
- ^ John A. Simpson and Edmund S. C. Weiner, editors (1989), “omen”, in The Oxford English Dictionary, 2nd edition, Oxford: Clarendon Press, →ISBN.
- ^ Watkins, Calvert (1985) The American Heritage Dictionary of Indo-European Roots, Boston: Houghton Mifflin Harcourt
- ↑ 3.0 3.1 3.2 De Vaan, Michiel (2008) “ōmen”, in Etymological Dictionary of Latin and the other Italic Languages (Leiden Indo-European Etymological Dictionary Series; 7), Leiden, Boston: Brill, →ISBN, pages 427-8
Old Galician-Portuguese
edit
omen m
- Alternative form of ome
Learned borrowing from Latin ōmen. First attested in 1585, originally as a neuter noun.[1]
- IPA(key): /ˈɔ.mɛn/
- Rhymes: -ɔmɛn
- Syllabification: o‧men
omen m inan
- (literary) omen, foreboding
- Synonyms: przepowiednia, wróżba, zapowiedź
- dobry omen ― good omen
- zły omen ― bad/ill omen
- ^ Maria Renata Mayenowa, Stanisław Rospond, Witold Taszycki, Stefan Hrabec, Władysław Kuraszkiewicz (2010-2023) “omen”, in Słownik Polszczyzny XVI Wieku [A Dictionary of 16th Century Polish]
- omen in Wielki słownik języka polskiego, Instytut Języka Polskiego PAN
- omen in Polish dictionaries at PWN