See also: NEMO

English [ edit ]

Adjective [ edit ]

nemo (not comparable)

( broadcasting , dated ) not emanating from main office Acronym of 1929 , Popular Science (volume 115, number 4, page 153) In New York City alone, there are nearly three dozen of these " nemo " points from which speeches, music, and entertainment are broadcast regularly.

, (volume 115, number 4, page 153) 1935, Alison Reppy, Air Law Review (volume 6, page 86) All "nemo" broadcasting, except entirely musical, would be abandoned. Stations would not risk broadcasting anything arising outside the studio, as there would be no editorial or censorship power.

Anagrams [ edit ]

Interlingua [ edit ]

Pronoun [ edit ]

nemo

Latin [ edit ]

Etymology [ edit ]

Contraction of the Old Latin phrase ne hemō (“no man”) (Classical ne homō). Compare praeda for praehenda.

Pronunciation [ edit ]

( Classical ) IPA (key) : /ˈneː.moː/

IPA : ( Ecclesiastical ) IPA (key) : /ˈne.mo/ , [ˈnɛː.mɔ]

IPA : , Audio (Classical)

Pronoun [ edit ]

nēmō m or f (genitive nēminis)

Declension [ edit ]

Third-declension noun, singular only.

Case Singular Nominative nēmō Genitive nēminis Dative nēminī Accusative nēminem Ablative nēmine Vocative nēmō

In Classical Latin, the suppletive genitive nūllīus and ablatives nūllō (masculine) and nūllā (feminine) frequently occur.

Plural forms (ordered by case as above: neminēs, neminum, neminibus, neminēs, neminibus, neminēs) also exist, but are rare, because these forms can only be translated accurately as 'no people', which is often rendered by other methods.

Derived terms [ edit ]

Descendants [ edit ]

References [ edit ]

Alternative forms [ edit ]

Pronunciation [ edit ]

Adverb [ edit ]

nȇmo (Cyrillic spelling не̑мо)