Contionary:ej: Difference between revisions

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===Etymology===
===Etymology===
From [[Pre-Soc'ul']] [[Contionary:əh#Pre-Soc'ul'|əh]], from [[Wascotl]] [[Contionary:*ęs#Wascotl|*ęs]]
{{socl-inh|əh|ęs|}}


===Pronunciation===
===Pronunciation===

Revision as of 18:33, 2 May 2023

Primorskian

Alternative forms

Cyrillic: еј
Runic: ᛖᛃ (ej)

Etymology

From middle Primorskian ajt ("it"), from Proto-Balto-Slavic *is; compare Proto-Slavic ("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

  1. he
    example usage of ej here
    italicised translation 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

Noun

ej n. (class 5, genitive ejs, plural ejere)

  1. egg
    Fogels leggen ejere.
    Birds lay eggs.

Usage notes

Synonyms

Derived terms

Related terms

Soc'ul'

Soc'ul' numerals
jál ej ta


Etymology

Template:Socl-inh

Pronunciation

(Soc'ul') IPA: [ə˥x]

Numeral

ej

  1. two

Adjective

ej

  1. other
    Iyútnux réu ej.
    The other hand was caught in a web.

Derived terms

ej jutxux, ej-