Contionary:pér
Anrish
Etymology
From a merger of Early Modern Anrish pár, from Middle Anrish thvár, from Old Anrish tƿár, from Proto-Germanic *twanz and pér from Old Irish péire
Pronunciation
(Anrish) IPA: /peːr/
Noun
pér (runic:‧ᛄᛖᚱ‧); (ordinal: dara)
- (numeral) Two
- (noun) A pair, couple of things
Inflection
as a numeral:
| Case | indefinite | definite |
|---|---|---|
| Common | pér | pére |
| Dative | peì | peimí |
| Genitive | peio | peino |
as a noun:
| Ⅰ | ɴᴏᴍ. | ɢᴇɴ. | ᴅᴀᴛ. | ᴠᴏᴄ. |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| sɢ. | — | —ʜ | ||
| ᴘʟ. | —ʟ | — | —b | —ʟ |
| ᴄᴏʟ. | —ʜ | —(ʟ) | —ʟ |
Lifashian
Etymology
Borrowed from Akkadian pīru.
Pronunciation
- (Standard) IPA: [peːr]
- (Trapezuntine) IPA: [peːr]
- (Cotyorene) IPA: [peːr]
- (Helenopolitan) IPA: [pəɪ̯r]
Noun
pér m (first declension)
- elephant
- Mék nyam pérom méyewi lersyit mé esyim.
- I've never seen an elephant.
- Mék nyam pérom méyewi lersyit mé esyim.
Inflection
| Case | Singular | Plural |
|---|---|---|
| Nominative | pér | péri |
| Genitive | péré | pérám |
| Dative | pérí | péruwi |
| Accusative | pérom | pérás |