an1

[uh n; when stressed an] /ən; when stressed æn/
indefinite article
1.
the form of a before an initial vowel sound (an arch; an honor) and sometimes, especially in British English, before an initial unstressed syllable beginning with a silent or weakly pronounced h :
an historian.
Origin
before 950; Middle English; Old English ān one in a weakened sense
Usage note
See a1.

an2

[uh n; when stressed an] /ən; when stressed æn/
conjunction
1.
Pronunciation Spelling. and.
2.
Archaic. if.
Also, an', 'n, 'n'.
Origin
1125-75; Middle English, unstressed phonetic variant of and

An

[ahn] /ɑn/
noun
1.
the Sumerian god of heaven: the counterpart of the Akkadian Anu.

an-1

1.
a prefix occurring before stems beginning with a vowel or h in loanwords from Greek, where it means “not,” “without,” “lacking” (anarchy; anecdote); used in the formation of compound words:
anelectric.
Also, before a consonant, a-.
Origin
< Greek. See a-6, in-3, un-1

an-2

1.
variant of ad- before n: announce.

an-3

1.
variant of ana- before a vowel:
anion.

-an

1.
a suffix occurring originally in adjectives borrowed from Latin, formed from nouns denoting places (Roman; urban) or persons (Augustan), and now productively forming English adjectives by extension of the Latin pattern. Attached to geographic names, it denotes provenance or membership (American; Chicagoan; Tibetan), the latter sense now extended to membership in social classes, religious denominations, etc., in adjectives formed from various kinds of noun bases (Episcopalian; pedestrian; Puritan; Republican) and membership in zoological taxa (acanthocephalan; crustacean). Attached to personal names, it has the additional senses “contemporary with” (Elizabethan; Jacobean) or “proponent of” (Hegelian; Freudian) the person specified by the noun base. The suffix -an, and its variant -ian also occurs in a set of personal nouns, mainly loanwords from French, denoting one who engages in, practices, or works with the referent of the base noun (comedian; grammarian; historian; theologian); this usage is especially productive with nouns ending in -ic, (electrician; logician; technician). See -ian for relative distribution with that suffix.
Compare -enne, -ean, -arian, -ician.
Origin
Middle English < Latin -ānus, -āna, -ānum; in some words replacing -ain, -en < Old French < Latin

AN

Also, A.-N.

An

Symbol, Chemistry
1.

an.

1.
in the year.
Origin
< Latin annō

A.N.

2.
Associate in Nursing.
Examples from the web for an
  • The policy commonly contains clauses which recognize such an.
British Dictionary definitions for an

an1

/æn; unstressed ən/
determiner
1.
a form of the indefinite article used before an initial vowel sound: an old car, an elf, an honour
Usage note
An was formerly often used before words that begin with h and are unstressed on the first syllable: an hotel; an historic meeting. Sometimes the initial h was not pronounced. This usage is now becoming obsolete
Word Origin
Old English ānone

an2

/æn; unstressed ən/
conjunction
1.
(subordinating) an obsolete or dialect word for if See and (sense 9)

an3

abbreviation
1.
Netherlands Antilles

An1

/ɑːn/
noun
1.
(myth) the Sumerian sky god Babylonian counterpart Anu

An2

Chemical symbol
1.
actinon

AN

abbreviation
1.
Anglo-Norman

an-

prefix
1.
not; without: anaphrodisiac
Word Origin
from Greek

-an

suffix
1.
(forming adjectives and nouns) belonging to or relating to; a person belonging to or coming from: European
2.
(forming adjectives and nouns) typical of or resembling; a person typical of: Elizabethan
3.
(forming adjectives and nouns) adhering to or following; an adherent of: Christian
4.
(forming nouns) a person who specializes or is expert in: dietitian, phonetician
Word Origin
from Latin -ānus, suffix of adjectives
Word Origin and History for an

indefinite article before words beginning with vowels, 12c., from Old English an (with a long vowel) "one; lone," also used as a prefix an- "single, lone;" see one for the divergence of that word from this. Also see a, of which this is the older, fuller form.

In other European languages, identity between indefinite article and the word for "one" remains explicit (e.g. French un, German ein, etc.) Old English got by without indefinite articles: He was a good man in Old English was he wæs god man. Circa 15c., a and an commonly were written as one word with the following noun, which contributed to the confusion over how such words as newt and umpire ought to be divided (see N).

In Shakespeare, etc., an sometimes is a contraction of as if (a usage first attested c.1300), especially before it.

an-

privative prefix, from Greek an-, "not, without," related to ne- and cognate with Sanskrit an-, Latin in-, Gothic and Old English un- (see un- (1)).

form of Latin ad- before -n- (see ad-).

-an

word-forming element meaning "pertaining to," from Latin -anus, in some cases via French -ain, -en.

an in Medicine

an- pref.
Variant of a-.

an in Technology

networking
The country code for the Netherlands Antilles (Dutch Antilles).
(1999-01-27)

Related Abbreviations for an

AN

  1. airman, Navy
  2. Anglo-Norman
  3. Associate in Nursing

an.

  1. above named
  2. Latin anno (in the year)
  3. annual
  4. annotated
  5. Latin ante (before)