Contionary:ej: Difference between revisions
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==Skundavisk== | ==Skundavisk== | ||
===Etymology=== | ===Etymology=== | ||
From Middle Skundavisk ''ei'', from Old Skundavisk ''eia'', ''aeia'', from Halmisk '' | From Middle Skundavisk ''ei'', from Old Skundavisk ''eia'', ''aeia'', from Halmisk ''ᚨᛃᚨ'' (''aja''), ''ᚨᛃᚨᛉ'' (''ajaŕ''), from Proto-Germanic ''*ajjaz'', variant of ''*ajją''. | ||
===Pronunciation=== | ===Pronunciation=== |
Revision as of 14:57, 12 November 2019
Primorskian
Alternative forms
Cyrillic: еј
Runic: ᛖᛃ (ej)
Etymology
From middle Primorskian ajt ("it"), from Proto-Balto-Slavic *is; compare Proto-Slavic jь ("he, she, it") and Czech jenž, jež ("that, who"). Ultimatley from Proto-Indo-European *éy *hıe ("this one, he"); compare Latin is ("he"), Gothic 𐌹𐍃 (is, "he") and Sanskrit अयम् (ayam, "this one").
Pronunciation
(Primorskian) IPA: /ej/
Noun
ej
- he
- example usage of ej here
- italicised translation here.
- example usage of ej here
Inflection
Usage notes
Synonyms
Derived terms
Related terms
Skundavisk
Etymology
From Middle Skundavisk ei, from Old Skundavisk eia, aeia, from Halmisk ᚨᛃᚨ (aja), ᚨᛃᚨᛉ (ajaŕ), from Proto-Germanic *ajjaz, variant of *ajją.
Pronunciation
- IPA: /ɛj/
Noun
ej n. (class 5, genitive ejs, plural ejere)
- egg
- Fogels leggen ejere.
- Birds lay eggs.
- Fogels leggen ejere.