[ɪˈmaː.ɡoː], [iˈmaː.ɡo]
OriginFrom Proto-Italic *imā + -āgō, from Proto-Indo-European *h₂eym- (“to imitate”). Cognate with imitor, aemulus, Old English emn, efn (“equal, level, even”). More at even.
- declension-3image, imitation, likeness, statue, representation
- declension-3ancestral image
- declension-3ghost, apparition
- declension-3semblance, appearance, shadow
- declension-3echo
- declension-3conception, thought
- declension-3reminder
- declension-3, rhetoriccomparison
- declension-3depiction
Formsimāgō(canonical, feminine) · imāginis(genitive) · imāgō(nominative, singular) · imāginēs(nominative, plural) · imāginis(genitive, singular) · imāginum(genitive, plural) · imāginī(dative, singular) · imāginibus(dative, plural) · imāginem(accusative, singular) · imāginēs(accusative, plural) · imāgine(ablative, singular) · imāginibus(ablative, plural) · imāgō(singular, vocative) · imāginēs(plural, vocative)
Source: Wiktionary