Contionary:az: Difference between revisions

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{{nm-header|aːz}}
{{nm-header|aːz}}
{{nm-pgmc|ajją}}Cf. Crimean Gothic ''[[wikt:ada#Crimean_Gothic|ada]]'', which also underwent East Germanic fortition following Holtzman's law.
{{nm-pgmc|ajją}}Cf. Crimean Gothic ''[[wikt:ada#Crimean_Gothic|ada]]'', which also underwent East Germanic fortition following Holtzman's law.
{{nm-noun-mh-2-nt|áz|ä́z|egg}}
{{nm-noun-mh-2-Z-nt|áz|ä́z|àz|ä̀z|egg}}
[[Category:Contionary]]
[[Category:Contionary]]



Revision as of 21:23, 5 December 2022

Niemish

Pronunciation

Etymology

From Proto-Germanic *ajją. Cf. Crimean Gothic ada, which also underwent East Germanic fortition following Holtzman's law.

Noun

² áz n.n. hard stem

  1. àz

Declension

declension of áz (nh declension)
singular plural
indefinite definite indefinite definite
nominative áz ázat áz áza
genitive ä́zes ä́ze ázise
dative áz ázum ázą ázę

Pamarėska

Alternative forms

jes/es - Western dialects

as - Eastern dialects

Etymology

From Old Pomorian ez, from Proto-Balto-Slavic *eˀź(un); compare with Proto-Slavic *(j)azъ, Old Prussian as, Latvian es, Lithuanian aš (earlier eš). From Proto-Indo-European *éǵ(h₂); compare Sanskrit अहम् (aham), Ancient Greek: ἐγώ (egṓ), Proto-Germanic *ek. The initial "a" instead of "e" in modern Pomorian language is the result of an Old Prussian influence (in Western dialects it is "es" or "jes" instead).

Pronunciation

/ˈɑz/ File:Az.ogv

Pronoun

àz

  1. (first-person singular) I

Declension