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) /y/ [y]
  • IPA: (South Slavic Grekelin) [y]
  • IPA: (North Slavic Grekelin) [ɨ]

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

Wacag logograph
 

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