Contionary:y

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Anrish

Etymology

From Middle Anrish ía, from Old Anrish ina (masc.), and ía (fem.), from the accusative singular of Proto-Germanic *iz

Pronunciation

(Anrish) IPA: /iɤ̯/

Pronoun

y (runic:‧ᛦ‧)

  1. Animate third-person pronoun; he, she, it, they
    Is y míra pirrio.
    ᛬ᛁᛞ‧ᛦ‧ᛘᛁᚱᚭ‧ᛄᛁᛊᛁᚮ᛬
    She is my sister.

Related terms

  • (inanimate): ì

Inflection

Case singular plural
Common y ⁄ ì yr ⁄ er
Dative ere eme
Genitive ero

Grekelin

Pronunciation (IPA)

  • IPA: (Standard Grekelin) /ˈu.mo/ [ˈu.mo]
  • IPA: (South Slavic Grekelin) [ˈu.mo]
  • IPA: (North Slavic Grekelin) [ˈu.mo]

Etymology

From Old Grekelin υ (ü) a misspelling of Pre-Grekelin οι (oi, pronounced the same as υ), derived from Medieval Greek ὄχι (ókhi), from Ancient Greek ούχι (oukhi), a variant of ου(κ) (ou(k)). The intervocalic [ç] was dropped somewhere in the 8th century (So 3-4 centuries before the Seljuk conquest), leading to /oi̯/ which then merged with the existing digraph <οι> yielding /y/.

Particle

  1. No (negative reply)
    Tilcs sarjak?   (Do you want fish?)
    Y (No)
  1. Negation
    Y munasza!   (Not even!)
  1. Negative vote
    2.122.000 ne cse 990.000 y   (2.122.000 yes and 990.000 no)

Alternative forms

  1. ü (Adapted from Hungarian orthography in older texts, may still be used for this word specifically)
  2. oi (Historical spelling, considered obsolete)

Knrawi

Etymology

Inherited.

Pronunciation

⫽ɉ̍˥⫽

Postposition

y (second-person zy)

  1. into
    (please add the primary text of this usage example)
    (please add an English translation of this usage example)

Derived terms