/unɡʲ/, [uŋɡʲ]
OriginFrom Vulgar Latin anglus, from Latin angulus, from Proto-Indo-European *h₂engulos (“joint?”), from *h₂eng-, *ang- (“corner, hirn”).
- masculinea village in Dragomirești, Neamț County, Romania
Formsunghiuri(plural) · unghi(accusative, indefinite, nominative, singular) · unghiul(accusative, definite, nominative, singular) · unghiuri(accusative, indefinite, nominative, plural) · unghiurile(accusative, definite, nominative, plural) · unghi(dative, genitive, indefinite, singular) · unghiului(dative, definite, genitive, singular) · unghiuri(dative, genitive, indefinite, plural) · unghiurilor(dative, definite, genitive, plural) · unghiule(singular, vocative) · unghiurilor(plural, vocative) · înghiu(alternative, dated) · унгь(alternative)
Source: Wiktionary — CC BY-SA 4.0