some - Wiktionary, the free dictionary
From Wiktionary, the free dictionary
From Middle English som, sum, from Old English sum (“some, a certain one”), from Proto-West Germanic *sum, from Proto-Germanic *sumaz (“some, a certain one”), from Proto-Indo-European *sem- (“one, whole”).
Cognate Scots sum, some (“some”), North Frisian som, sam, säm (“some”), West Frisian sommige, somlike (“some”), dialectal Dutch som, saom (“some”), standard Dutch sommige (“some”), Low German somige (“some”), German dialectal summige (“some”), Danish somme (“some”), Swedish somlig (“some”), Norwegian sum, som (“some”), Icelandic sumur (“some”), Gothic 𐍃𐌿𐌼𐍃 (sums, “one, someone”). More at same.
- (Received Pronunciation) IPA(key): /sʌm/, [sɐm]
- (Northern England) IPA(key): /sʊm/
- (US)
- (General Australian, New Zealand) IPA(key): /sɐm/, [säm]
- Homophone: sum
- Rhymes: -ʌm
some
- A certain number, at least two.
Some enjoy spicy food, others prefer it milder.
2013 July 19, Timothy Garton Ash, “Where Dr Pangloss meets Machiavelli”, in The Guardian Weekly, volume 189, number 6, page 18:
Hidden behind thickets of acronyms and gorse bushes of detail, a new great game is under way across the globe. Some call it geoeconomics, but it's geopolitics too. The current power play consists of an extraordinary range of countries simultaneously sitting down to negotiate big free trade and investment agreements.
- An indefinite quantity.
Can I have some of them?
- An indefinite amount; a part. Used mostly with abstract and nonliving objects.
Please give me some of the cake.
Everyone is wrong some of the time.
- (obsolete) Someone, a certain person.
- (an indefinite quantity): a few
a certain number
- Arabic: بَعْضٌ m (baʕḍun)
- Armenian: որոշ (hy) (oroš), ոմանք (hy) (omankʻ)
- Azerbaijani: bəzi (az), bəzilər
- Belarusian: некато́ры (njekatóry)
- Bengali: একটু (bn) (ekṭu)
- Bulgarian: няколко (bg) (njakolko)
- Catalan: qualque (ca) m or f, qualcun (ca) m, qualcuna (ca) f, qualcuns (ca) m pl, qualcunes (ca) f pl, algun (ca) m, alguna (ca) f, alguns (ca) m pl, algunes (ca) f pl
- Chinese:
- Chuukese: ekkoch
- Circassian:
- Czech: nějaký (cs)
- Dalmatian: calco
- Danish: nogle (da) c pl, somme
- Dutch: enigen (nl), sommigen (nl), enkele (nl), enkelen (nl)
- Finnish: jotkut (fi), muutamat, eräät, osa (fi), jokunen (fi)
- French: quelque (fr) m or f, quelques (fr) pl, certains (fr) m pl
- Galician: algún (gl) m
- German: einige (de), manche (de)
- Greek: μερικοί (el) m pl (merikoí), μερικές (el) f pl (merikés), μερικά (el) n pl (meriká)
- Hawaiian: kahi poʻe, kekahi poʻe
- Hebrew: כַּמָּה (he) (kama)
- Hungarian: egyesek pl, némelyek pl, néhányan (hu)
- Icelandic: sum (is) n pl, sumar (is) f pl, sumir m pl
- Indonesian: beberapa (id)
- Irish: daoine (ga) m pl
- Japanese: いくつか (ja) (ikutsuka), ある (ja)
- Kaitag: чумилра (čumilra)
- Khmer: អ្នកខ្លះ (neak klah)
- Korean: 어떤 (ko) (eotteon)
- Kurdish:
- Latin: quidam (la)
- Low German:
- Malay: seberapa, beberapa (ms)
- Mirandese: algun
- Norwegian: visse (no) pl
- Occitan: qualque (oc)
- Polish: niektóry (pl) m
- Portuguese: algum (pt) m
- Russian: не́который (ru) m (nékotoryj)
- Samoan: isi
- Scots: sum, some
- Scottish Gaelic: rann m, roinn f
- Serbo-Croatian: neki m pl, neke (sh) f pl, neka (sh) n pl
- Spanish: alguno (es) m
- Sundanese: sababaraha
- Swedish: vissa (sv), somliga (sv), en del (sv), några (sv)
- Tagalog: may (tl), mayroon (tl)
- Tamil: சில (ta) (cila), சிலர் (ta) (cilar) (only on humans)
- Tok Pisin: sampela
- Turkish: bazısı (tr), kimi (tr), kimisi (tr)
- Ukrainian: де́який (uk) (déjakyj)
- Vietnamese: vài (vi), một vài (vi), một số (vi), mấy (vi)
- Yiddish: עטלעכע (etlekhe), אַ ביסל (yi) (a bisl)
- Zazaki: tay
- Zealandic: sommige
indefinite quantity or number
- Arabic: بَعْض m (baʕḍ)
- Armenian: մի քանիսը (mi kʻanisə)
- Asturian: dellos (ast)
- Azerbaijani: bir neçə
- Belarusian: не́калькі (be) pl (njékalʹki), тро́хі (tróxi)
- Bengali: একটু (bn) (ekṭu)
- Bulgarian: няколко (bg) (njakolko)
- Burmese: တချို့ (my) (ta.hkyui.), အချို့ (my) (a.hkyui.)
- Carpathian Rusyn: дакілько (dakilʹko)
- Catalan: qualques (ca) pl, tot de (ca), alguns (ca) m pl, algunes (ca) f pl
- Chinese:
- Czech: několik (cs), trochu (cs)
- Danish: nogle (da), somme
- Dutch: wat (nl) (quantity), enige (nl) (number), enkele (nl) (number)
- Esperanto: iu (eo), iuj (eo) pl
- Finnish: joitakin (fi), muutamia (fi)
- French: du (fr) m, de la (fr) f, des (fr) pl
- German: ein paar (de), einige (de) pl, einige (de) pl
- Greek: μερικοί (el) m pl (merikoí), μερικές (el) f pl (merikés), μερικά (el) n pl (meriká)
- Hebrew: כַּמָה (he) (káma), אֲחָדִים m pl (akhadím), מְעַט (he) (me'át), קְצָת (he) (ktsat)
- Hindi: थोड़ा (hi) (thoṛā), कुछ (hi) (kuch), कोई (hi) (koī)
- Hungarian: pár (hu), néhány (hu), valahány (hu), egypár (hu), egynéhány (hu)
- Indonesian: beberapa (id)
- Irish: roinnt (ga) f
- Japanese: いくつか (ja) (ikutsuka), いくらか (ja) (ikuraka)
- Korean: 몇 (ko) (myeot)
- Low German:
- Māori: ētahi, he, ehinu
- Norwegian:
- Occitan: qualque (oc)
- Polish: trochę (pl), kilka (pl)
- Portuguese: alguns (pt)
- Romanian: nişte (ro)
- Russian: немно́го (ru) (nemnógo), не́сколько (ru) (néskolʹko)
- Scottish Gaelic: rann m, roinn f
- Slovak: niekoľko, trochu, zopár
- Spanish: unos (es) m pl, unas (es) f pl
- Sundanese: sababaraha
- Swahili: baadhi (sw)
- Swedish: några (sv), en del (sv)
- Tamil: கொஞ்சம் (ta) (koñcam)
- Thai: บาง (th) (baang), มั่ง (th) (mâng)
- Tok Pisin: sampela
- Ukrainian: кі́лька (uk) (kílʹka), тро́хи (tróxy)
- Vietnamese: một ít
- Yoruba: àwọn
- Zazaki: tayn
- Zealandic: 'n paer
indefinite amount, part
- Arabic: بَعْض m (baʕḍ)
- Armenian: մի քիչ (mi kʻičʻ)
- Azerbaijani: biraz (az), bir qədər
- Belarusian: тро́хі (tróxi)
- Bengali: একটু (bn) (ekṭu)
- Bulgarian: малко (bg) (malko)
- Catalan: tot de (ca), quelcom de, una mica de
- Chinese:
- Danish: noget (da) n
- Dutch: (please verify) wat (nl), (please verify) een deel
- Finnish: jonkin verran (fi), joskus (fi) (some of the time)
- French: du (fr) m, de la (fr) f, des (fr) pl
- German: etwas (de)
- Greek: λίγο (el) (lígo)
- Hindi: कुछ (hi) (kuch), थोड़ा (hi) (thoṛā)
- Hungarian: valamennyi (hu), egy kevés, egy kicsi
- Irish: roinnt (ga) f
- Italian: del (it) m, della (it) f
- Low German:
- Norwegian: som m, litt (no)
- Persian: کمی (fa) (kami)
- Polish: trochę (pl)
- Portuguese: um pouco de
- Russian: немно́го (ru) (nemnógo), небольшая часть f (nebolʹšaja častʹ)
- Scots: sum
- Scottish Gaelic: rann m, roinn f
- Slovak: trochu
- Spanish: algo (es) n
- Swahili: baadhi (sw)
- Swedish: lite (sv), en del (sv)
- Tamil: கொஞ்சம் (ta) (koñcam)
- Tok Pisin: hap
- Ukrainian: тро́хи (tróxy)
- Zazaki: taynek
- Zealandic: wat
some
- (stressed form) A nonzero, unspecified proportion of (a bounded set of countable things): at least two.
- Antonyms: zero, no; a lot of, many, numerous; countless
- Hypernyms: multiple, various
- Hyponyms: a few, a couple of, a handful of
- Coordinate term: one
- Near-synonym: any
Some people like camping.
2013 July 20, “The attack of the MOOCs”, in The Economist[1], volume 408, number 8845, archived from the original on 17 July 2020:
Since the launch early last year of […] two Silicon Valley start-ups offering free education through MOOCs, massive open online courses, the ivory towers of academia have been shaken to their foundations. University brands built in some cases over centuries have been forced to contemplate the possibility that information technology will rapidly make their existing business model obsolete.
2013 July-August, Sarah Glaz, “Ode to Prime Numbers”, in American Scientist[2], volume 101, number 4, archived from the original on 29 June 2015:
Some poems, echoing the purpose of early poetic treatises on scientific principles, attempt to elucidate the mathematical concepts that underlie prime numbers. Others play with primes’ cultural associations. Still others derive their structure from mathematical patterns involving primes.
- A nonzero, unspecified quantity or number of (an unbounded set of countable things).
- Antonyms: zero, no; a lot of, many, numerous; countless
- Hypernyms: multiple, various
- Hyponyms: a few, a couple of, a handful of
- Coordinate term: one
- Near-synonym: any
Would you like some grapes?
1897 December (indicated as 1898), Winston Churchill, chapter IV, in The Celebrity: An Episode, New York, N.Y.: The Macmillan Company; London: Macmillan & Co., Ltd., →OCLC, pages 58–59:
The Celebrity, by arts unknown, induced Mrs. Judge Short and two other ladies to call at Mohair on a certain afternoon when Mr. Cooke was trying a trotter on the track. […] Their example was followed by others at a time when the master of Mohair was superintending in person the docking of some two-year-olds, and equally invisible.
1918, W[illiam] B[abington] Maxwell, chapter XLIV, in The Mirror and the Lamp, Indianapolis, Ind.: The Bobbs-Merrill Company, →OCLC, page 364:
In the autumn there was a row at some cement works about the unskilled labour men. A union had just been started for them and all but a few joined. One of these blacklegs was laid for by a picket and knocked out of time.
- An unspecified amount of (something uncountable).
- Antonyms: zero, no
- Hyponyms: a little, a lot of, much
- Near-synonym: any
Would you like some water?
After some persuasion, he finally agreed.
1918, W[illiam] B[abington] Maxwell, chapter XVI, in The Mirror and the Lamp, Indianapolis, Ind.: The Bobbs-Merrill Company, →OCLC, pages 130–131:
It was a joy to snatch some brief respite, jump upon a tram, and find himself in the rectory drawing–room. Listening here was as pleasant as talking; just to watch was pleasant. The young priests who lived here wore cassocks and birettas; their faces were fine and mild, yet really strong, like the rector's face; and in their intercourse with him and his wife they seemed to be brothers.
- (stressed form) A certain, an unspecified or unknown.
I've just met some guy who said he knew you.
The sequence S converges to zero for some initial value v.
1921, Ben Travers, chapter 4, in A Cuckoo in the Nest, Garden City, N.Y.: Doubleday, Page & Company, published 1925, →OCLC:
By some paradoxical evolution rancour and intolerance have been established in the vanguard of primitive Christianity. Mrs. Spoker, in common with many of the stricter disciples of righteousness, was as inclement in demeanour as she was cadaverous in aspect.
2013 June 14, Jonathan Freedland, “Obama's once hip brand is now tainted”, in The Guardian Weekly, volume 189, number 1, page 18:
Where we once sent love letters in a sealed envelope, or stuck photographs of our children in a family album, now such private material is despatched to servers and clouds operated by people we don't know and will never meet. Perhaps we assume that our name, address and search preferences will be viewed by some unseen pair of corporate eyes, probably not human, and don't mind that much.
- (stressed form) A considerable quantity or number of.
He had edited the paper for some years.
He stopped working some time ago.
1860 December – 1861 August, Charles Dickens, chapter II, in Great Expectations […], volume I, London: Chapman and Hall, […], published October 1861, →OCLC, page 29:
[…] I took it, in the hope that it was not intended for early use, and would not be missed for some time.
1897 December (indicated as 1898), Winston Churchill, chapter II, in The Celebrity: An Episode, New York, N.Y.: The Macmillan Company; London: Macmillan & Co., Ltd., →OCLC, page 15:
We drove back to the office with some concern on my part at the prospect of so large a case. Sunning himself on the board steps, I saw for the first time Mr. Farquhar Fenelon Cooke. He was dressed out in broad gaiters and bright tweeds, like an English tourist, and his face might have belonged to Dagon, idol of the Philistines.
- (stressed form) Approximately, about (with a number).
She has worked at the company for some thirty years now. (31 and two months, to be exact.)
There were only some three or four cars in the lot at the time.
2003, Richard N. Cooper, Richard Layard, What the Future Holds: Insights from Social Science, MIT Press, →ISBN, page 129:
What other natural experiments might we have to test climate sensitivity? Another one that happens every year is the change in seasons. Winter predictably follows summer, being some fifteen degrees colder in the Northern Hemisphere and five degrees colder than summer in the Southern Hemisphere. The reason the Southern Hemisphere has a smaller seasonal cycle is because it has much more ocean than land, […]
2023, J. Allen Hynek, The UFO Experience: Evidence Behind Close Encounters, Project Blue Book, and the Search for Answers, Red Wheel/Weiser, →ISBN, page 142:
the local police, who, with the investigator, reportedly placed a compass near the two signs that had rattled and found a deviation of some fifteen degrees. Placed next to the Renault in which they had come, the compass showed a deviation of only four degrees, but there was no deviation at all near the sign that had not rattled.
- (stressed form) Emphasizing a number.
She has worked at the company for some five years now! How remarkable!
- all and some
- and then some
- at some point
- bang some heads together
- buy some time
- by some distance
- come get some
- for some reason
- for some time
- get some
- if ever there were some
- in some places
- of some use
- other some
- othersome
- quite some
- show some skin
- snag some z's
- somebody
- some day
- someday
- somedays
- somedeal
- some few
- somehow
- some kind of / some kinda
- some ol'
- some old
- some ole
- someone
- some people
- someplace
- somepony
- some something or other
- some such
- something
- some time
- sometime
- sometimes
- some time yet
- someway
- someways
- somewhat
- somewhen
- somewhence
- somewhere
- somewhile
- some white man's grave
- somewhither
- somewhy
- somewise
- summerteeth
- take some beating
- take some doing
- whip some skull on
(stressed form) a nonzero, unspecified proportion of
- Arabic: بَعْضٌ m (baʕḍun)
- Egyptian Arabic: بعض (baʕḍ)
- Armenian: որոշ (hy) (oroš)
- Azerbaijani: bəzi (az)
- Baluchi: لہتے (lahti, lahte)
- Bulgarian: някои (njakoi)
- Burmese: အချို့ (my) (a.hkyui.), တချို့ (my) (ta.hkyui.)
- Catalan: algun (ca)
- Cherokee: ᎢᎦᏓ (igada)
- Chinese:
- Danish: nogle (da) c pl
- Dutch: enige (nl) (countable), sommige (nl) (countable), enkele (nl) (countable)
- Finnish: jotkut (fi) (of people), jotkin (fi) (of things), osa (fi) (+ elative)
- French: certain (fr), certains (fr) pl, des (fr)
- German: einige (de), manch (de)
- Gothic: 𐍃𐌿𐌼𐍃 (sums)
- Greek: μερικοί (el) m pl (merikoí), μερικές (el) f pl (merikés), μερικά (el) n pl (meriká)
- Hindi: कुछ (hi) (kuch)
- Hungarian: egyes (hu), néhány (hu), némely (hu), némelyik (hu), bizonyos (hu)
- Interlingua: alcun
- Irish: roinnt (ga)
- Italian: alcuno (it)
- Japanese: 〜か (ja) (-ka)
- Latin: aliqui (la), alii, nonnullus (la)
- Mon: please add this translation if you can
- Navajo: łaʼ
- Norwegian:
- Polish: niektórzy pl or m, niektóre pl or f
- Portuguese: algum (pt)
- Russian: не́сколько (ru) (néskolʹko), немно́го (ru) (nemnógo)
- Scots: sum
- Swahili: baadhi ya (sw)
- Swedish: några (sv), en del (sv), vissa (sv)
- Tamil: சில (ta) (cila), சிலர் (ta) (cilar) (only on humans)
- Thai: บาง (th) (baang)
- Tok Pisin: sampela
- Tooro: -mu
- Turkish: bazı (tr)
- Urdu: کچھ (kuch)
- Walloon: sacwants (wa) m or f, sacwantès (wa) f
- Welsh: rhai
- Zazaki: tay
- Zealandic: sommige
unspecified quantity or number of
- Armenian: մի քիչ (mi kʻičʻ), մի քանի (mi kʻani)
- Aromanian: nishti
- Bulgarian: няколко (bg) (njakolko)
- Catalan: alguns (ca) m pl, algunes (ca) f pl
- Danish: nogle (da) c pl
- Dutch: wat (nl) (countable/uncountable), enkele (nl) (countable), enige (nl) (countable)
- Finnish: vähän (fi) (usually omitted), jokunen (fi)
- French: quelque (fr), quelques (fr) pl
- German: einige (de), welche (de), ein paar (de)
- Greek: λίγο (el) (lígo)
- Hebrew: כַּמָה (he) (káma), אֲחָדִים m pl (akhadím), מְעַט (he) (me'át), קְצָת (he) (ktsat)
- Hungarian: néhány (hu), pár (hu), egypár (hu), egynéhány (hu), valahány (hu)
- Indonesian: beberapa (id)
- Interlingua: qualque
- Italian: alcuno (it)
- Khmer: ន្តិចបន្តួច (bɑntəch bɑntuəch)
- Latin: aliqui (la)
- Mon: please add this translation if you can
- Navajo: łaʼ
- Norman: tchique
- Norwegian:
- Polish: kilka (pl) pl or f
- Portuguese: algum (pt)
- Romanian: niște (ro)
- Russian: expressed by genitive case
- Sorbian:
- Lower Sorbian: někotary
- Spanish: algunos (es) m pl, algunas (es) f pl
- Sundanese: sababaraha
- Swedish: några (sv), lite (sv), en del (sv)
- Talysh: (Asalemi) چن گله (can gəla)
- Tamil: கொஞ்சம் (ta) (koñcam)
- Tocharian B: ksa
- Tok Pisin: sampela
- Ukrainian: кі́лька (uk) (kílʹka)
- Walloon: sacwants (wa) m or f, sacwantès (wa) f, des (wa) m or f, kékes m or f, kékès f
- Welsh: rhai
- Wolof: ay (wo)
- Yoruba: àwọn
unspecified amount of
- Bulgarian: малко (bg) (malko)
- Danish: nogen (da) c, noget (da) n
- Dutch: wat (nl)
- Finnish: vähän (fi) (usually omitted)
- French: du (fr), de la (fr)
- German: etwas (de)
- Greek: λίγο (el) (lígo)
- Hungarian: némi (hu), egy kis, egy kevés, valamennyi (hu), valamelyes (hu)
- Khmer: បន្តិចបន្តួច (bɑntəch bɑntuəch)
- Latin: aliqui (la)
- Norwegian: litt (no)
- Polish: trochę (pl)
- Portuguese: um pouco (pt)
- Russian: expressed by genitive case
- Swedish: lite (sv), en del (sv)
- Talysh: (Asalemi) تیکهیی (tikei)
- Tok Pisin: sampela
- Walloon: do (wa) m, del (wa) f, ene miete di m or f, on pô do m, on pô del f
- Welsh: peth (cy)
- Zealandic: 'n bitje (implies a little quantity)
certain, unspecified or unknown
- Armenian: մի (hy) (mi), ինչ-որ (inčʻ-or)
- Azerbaijani: hansısa
- Belarusian: які́сьці (jakísʹci), які́сь (jakísʹ), не́йкі (njéjki), які́-не́будзь (jakí-njébudzʹ), некато́ры (njekatóry)
- Bulgarian: ня́какъв (njákakǎv), ня́кой (njákoj)
- Chinese:
- Czech: nějaký (cs), některý (cs)
- Danish: en (da) c, et (da) n, en vis c, et vist n
- Dutch: (please verify) een (nl), (please verify) een zeker , (please verify) een of ander (nl)
- Esperanto: ia (eo)
- Finnish: eräs (fi), joku (fi), jokin (fi)
- French: quelconque (fr)
- German: irgendein (de)
- Greek: κάποιος (el) (kápoios)
- Hindi: कोई (hi) (koī), कुछ (hi) (kuch)
- Hungarian: valamilyen (hu), valamiféle (hu), valami (hu), egy bizonyos
- Indonesian: beberapa (id)
- Irish: éigin
- Old Irish: nach
- Japanese: ある (ja) (aru)
- Latin: quīdam (la)
- Macedonian: некој (nekoj)
- Polish: jakiś (pl) m
- Portuguese: algum (pt), um (pt)
- Russian: како́й-то (ru) (kakój-to), не́который (ru) (nékotoryj), како́й-нибудь (ru) (kakój-nibudʹ), не́кий (ru) (nékij) (a certain)
- Scottish Gaelic: air choireigin
- Slovak: nejaký, niektorý
- Sundanese: sababaraha
- Swedish: någon (sv), något (sv)
- Tok Pisin: sampela
- Turkish: bir (tr)
- Ukrainian: яки́йсь (uk) (jakýjsʹ), котри́йсь (kotrýjsʹ), де́який (uk) (déjakyj), яки́й-небудь (uk) (jakýj-nebudʹ)
- Urdu: کوئی (koī), کچھ (kuch)
- Vietnamese: nào đó, gì đó
- Walloon: on (wa) m, ene (wa) f
- Welsh: rhyw (cy)
considerable quantity or number of
- Bulgarian: доста (bg) (dosta), немалко (bg) (nemalko)
- Dutch: (please verify) aardig wat
- Finnish: joitakin (fi)
- German: einige (de), etliche (de)
- Greek: αρκετά (el) (arketá)
- Hebrew: כַּמָה (he) (káma), אֲחָדִים m pl (akhadím)
- Hungarian: jókora (hu), jó (hu), jó pár, jó néhány
- Indonesian: beberapa (id)
- Polish: kilka (pl) pl or f
- Portuguese: algum (pt)
- Russian: не́сколько (ru) (néskolʹko)
- Sundanese: sababaraha
- Walloon: sacwants (wa) m or f, sacwantès (wa) f, kékes m or f, kékès f, puzieurs (wa) m or f, puzieurès f
- Zazaki: teney
Translations to be checked
- Arabic: (please verify) بَعْض (baʕḍ), (please verify) حَوَالِي (ḥawālī)
- Egyptian Arabic: بَعْض (baʕḍ)
- Chinese:
- Czech: (please verify) nějaký (cs) m, (please verify) několik (cs)
- Esperanto: (please verify) kelke, (1) (please verify) kelka (eo), (2) (please verify) kelkaj (eo)
- Frisian:
- Greek: (please verify) μερικοί (el) (merikoí), (please verify) λίγο (el) (lígo), (please verify) κάποιος (el) (kápoios)
- Ido: (please verify) kelka (io), (please verify) ula (io)
- Italian: (please verify) qualche (it)
- Japanese: (please verify) 或る (ja) (ある, aru), (please verify) 幾らか (ja) (いくらか, ikuraka), (please verify) 幾つか (ja) (いくつか, ikutsuka)
- Korean: (please verify) 어떤 (ko) (eotteon)
- Kurdish:
- Macedonian: (please verify) некој m (nekoj), (please verify) некои pl (nekoi), (please verify) извесен m (izvesen), (please verify) извесни pl (izvesni), (please verify) еден (mk) m (eden), (please verify) едни pl (edni), (please verify) неколку (mk) (nekolku)
- Maltese: (please verify) xi
- Norwegian: (please verify) noe (no) (uncountable), (please verify) noen (no) (countable)
- Romanian: (please verify) niște (ro), (please verify) câteva
- Slovak: (please verify) niekoľko
- Spanish: (please verify) algunos (es) m pl, (please verify) algunas (es) f pl
- Telugu: (please verify) కొన్ని (te) (konni), (please verify) కొందరు (te) (kondaru), (please verify) కొంత (te) (konta)
- Turkish: (please verify) biraz (tr), (please verify) bazı (tr), (please verify) yaklaşık (tr)
- Woiwurrung: (please verify) wonga geek
some (not comparable)
- Of a measurement: approximately, roughly.
- Synonyms: see Thesaurus:approximately
I guess he must have weighed some 90 kilos.
Some 30,000 spectators witnessed the feat.
Some 4,000 acres of land were flooded.
- (dialect) To a certain extent, or for a certain period.
2014, C. R. Scott, Invisible War: Attack the Covenant:
They walked some and talked some.
- (dialect) Somewhat, a little.
1899, Columbus Medical Journal: A Magazine of Medicine and Surgery, page 108:
I felt some better and continued taking the preparation through all that day, still ad libitum, and by evening, twenty-four hours after I began its use, felt considerably improved.
1912, Mary Theodora Whitley, An Empirical Study of Certain Tests for Individual Differences, page 154:
Have felt some better to-day than yesterday but not quite normal. A little nervous all day. Slept better than previous night, but not so well as usual, for about 7 hrs.
2002 February 26, Anne McCaffrey, The Chronicles of Pern: First Fall, Del Rey, →ISBN, page 66:
"She's some better," the pilot said, "but it'll be a long convalescence. Pierre's taking real good care of her. Ongola's a rock, as always, and if Joel would only stop yapping about losing so much cargo..."
2002 October 15 [????], Raymond Chandler, The Lady in the Lake, The Little Sister, The Long Goodbye, Playback: Introduction by Tom Hiney, Everyman's Library, →ISBN, page 68:
It looked some like Muriel, but not enough to be sure by any manner of means.
approximately, roughly
- Arabic: حَوَالِي ، بَعض الشَّيء ، إلَى حَدٍ مَا
- Armenian: մոտ (hy) (mot)
- Bulgarian: около (bg) (okolo)
- Catalan: al voltant de, sobre (ca), vora (ca)
- Comorian:
- Ngazidja Comorian: kadiri ya
- Dutch: ongeveer (nl)
- Finnish: jotakin (fi), jotakuinkin (fi), noin (fi), suunnilleen (fi)
- French: quelque (fr), environ (fr)
- German: ungefähr (de), etwa (de), um (de)
- Greek: περίπου (el) (perípou)
- Hindi: के लगभग (ke lagbhag)
- Hungarian: mintegy (hu), nagyjából (hu), körülbelül (hu)
- Japanese: 約 (ja) (やく, yaku)
- Latin: alii
- Mari:
- Eastern Mari: иктаж (iktaž)
- Norwegian: omtrent (no)
- Portuguese: uns (pt), mais ou menos (pt)
- Slovak: zhruba, približne
- Spanish: unos (es)
- Swedish: runt (sv), omkring (sv), cirka (sv), säkert (sv), nog (sv), väl (sv)
- “some”, in OneLook Dictionary Search.
- William Dwight Whitney, Benjamin E[li] Smith, editors (1911), “some”, in The Century Dictionary […], New York, N.Y.: The Century Co., →OCLC.
- “some”, in Merriam-Webster Online Dictionary, Springfield, Mass.: Merriam-Webster, 1996–present.
- “some”, in Dictionary.com Unabridged, Dictionary.com, LLC, 1995–present.
Syllabic abbreviation of sosiaalinen media (“social media”).
some (informal or in compounds)
- social media
Jos tänä päivänä aikoo menestyä politiikassa, on pakko olla somessa.
- If one wants to be successful in politics nowadays, it's obligatory to be on social media.
- someaddiktio
- someaika
- somealusta
- somehaaste
- somehitti
- somehuhu
- somehäirintä
- someilmiö
- somejulkaisu
- somejulkkis
- somejätti
- somekalenteri
- somekampanja
- somekanava
- somekansa
- somekasvatus
- somekieli
- somekiusaaja
- somekiusaaminen
- somekohu
- somekoomikko
- somekoukku
- somekulttuuri
- somekupla
- somekuva
- somekäyttäjä
- somekäyttäytyminen
- someloukkaantuminen
- someloukkaus
- somemainonta
- somemainos
- somemarkkinointi
- somepalvelu
- somepaniikki
- somepersoona
- somepostaus
- somepäivitys
- someraivo
- someriippuvuus
- sometili
- sometyö
- somevaikuttaja
- someviesti
- someviestintä
- somevirta
- someyhtiö
- someähky
- “some”, in Kielitoimiston sanakirja [Dictionary of Contemporary Finnish][3] (in Finnish) (online dictionary, continuously updated), Kotimaisten kielten keskuksen verkkojulkaisuja 35, Helsinki: Kotimaisten kielten tutkimuskeskus (Institute for the Languages of Finland), 2004–, retrieved 3 July 2023
some
- third-person singular present indicative of sumir
- (reintegrationist norm) inflection of sumir:
some f
some
sōme
- inflection of sōm:
- Hyphenation: so‧me
See the etymology of the corresponding lemma form.
some
- inflection of somar:
See the etymology of the corresponding lemma form.
some
- inflection of sumir:
some (Cyrillic spelling соме)