ing

A meadow, especially a low meadow near a river; water meadow.

Noun

  1. A meadow, especially a low meadow near a river; water meadow.
    • Ings, glens, and fens of the Highlands.
    • Bill for dividing and inclosing certain open common fields, ings, common pastures, and other commonable lands. - 1773, Journals of the House of Commons:
    • [There] lay an extent of meadow grounds, in ings, to afford a supply of hay. - 1804, Marshall (William), On the Landed Property of England, possibly quoting an earlier work

Origin

From Middle English ing, ynge, enge, from Old English ing, *eng (“a meadow; ing”), from Proto-Germanic *angijō (“meadow”), from Proto-Indo-European *h₂énkos (“a bend; curve; bowl; hollow; dell; glen”), from *h₂enk- (“to bend; curve; bow”). Cognate with Scots eng (“ing; meadow”), Dutch eng (“pasture; farmland”), Danish eng (“meadow”), Swedish äng (“meadow; field”), Norwegian eng (“meadow”), Faroese ong (“grassland; meadow; pasture”), Icelandic eng (“a meadow”), Icelandic engi (“a meadow; meadowland”).

Forms

ings

Noun Entry 2

  1. The letter for the ng sound /ŋ/ in Pitman shorthand.

Origin

From Pitman em and en, which it is related to phonetically and graphically, and the sound it represents. The change in vowel probably reflects the familiar suffix -ing.

Forms

ings

Related

eng the name of the IPA letter for this sound ing-bing