/ˈpʲiɟiːnʲ/
OriginFrom Middle English pygyn (from pig (“container for wine”), possibly so named from being made of pigskin.), assimilated to the suffix -ín. Cognate with Scottish Gaelic pigean and Welsh picyn.
Formspigín(genitive, singular) · pigíní(nominative, plural) · pigín(indefinite, nominative, singular) · pigíní(indefinite, nominative, plural) · a phigín(indefinite, singular, vocative) · a phigíní(indefinite, plural, vocative) · pigín(genitive, indefinite, singular) · pigíní(genitive, indefinite, plural) · pigín(dative, indefinite, singular) · pigíní(dative, indefinite, plural) · an pigín(definite, nominative, singular) · na pigíní(definite, nominative, plural) · an phigín(definite, genitive, singular) · na bpigíní(definite, genitive, plural) · leis an bpigín(dative, definite, singular) · don phigín(dative, definite, singular) · leis na pigíní(dative, definite, plural) · pigín(error-unrecognized-form) · phigín(error-unrecognized-form) · bpigín(error-unrecognized-form)
Source: Wiktionary — CC BY-SA 4.0