Contionary:ǽr: Difference between revisions
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! Case !! ''singular'' !! ''plural'' | ! Case !! ''singular'' !! ''plural'' | ||
|- | |- | ||
| ''Common'' | | | ''Common'' || ǽr || ǽrr | ||
|- | |- | ||
| ''Dative'' || | | ''Dative'' || ǽrre || ǽreme | ||
|- | |- | ||
| ''Genitive'' || | | ''Genitive'' || ǽrað || ǽrro | ||
|} | |} | ||
[[Category:Contionary]] [[Category:Anrish pronouns|ær]] [[Category:Anrish words|ær]] | [[Category:Contionary]] [[Category:Anrish pronouns|ær]] [[Category:Anrish words|ær]] |
Revision as of 22:02, 24 February 2019
Anrish
Etymology
From Middle Anrish ǽðr ("each other, one another; a reciprocal pronoun"), from Old Anrish áðer, ǽðr ("second, other of two"), from Proto-Germanic *anþeraz
Pronunciation
(Anrish) IPA: /aːir/
Pronoun
ǽr (runic:‧ᛆᚱ‧)
- (public register) Self (reflexive pronoun), each other, one another (reciprocal pronoun)
- (intimate register) Thou, you, ye (second person pronoun)
- Ǽrr báuan-yr
- ᛬ᛆᚱᚱ‧ᛒᛆᚢᚭᛌᛦᚱ᛬
- (public) They love one another ⁄ (intimate) They love you (plural)
Synonyms
Usage notes
In the intimate register, reflexive and reciprocal meanings are conveyed by the medio-passive voice alone, thus "They love each other" would be "Báune yr".
Inflection
Case | singular | plural |
---|---|---|
Common | ǽr | ǽrr |
Dative | ǽrre | ǽreme |
Genitive | ǽrað | ǽrro |