Contionary:brace: Difference between revisions

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From Old Brittainese ''braces'', ''brace'', from Latin ''[[wiktionary:Bracchium#Latin|Bracchium]]''. Ultimately from Ancient Greek βραχίων. Change of gender from masculine to feminine is regular for soft-stem neuters (and common for body pairs).
From Old Brittainese ''braces'', ''brace'', from Latin ''[[wiktionary:Bracchium#Latin|Bracchium]]''. Ultimately from Ancient Greek βραχίων. Change of gender from masculine to feminine is regular for soft-stem neuters (and common for body pairs).
====Noun====
====Noun====
{{br-noun|f|decl=1s}}
{{br-noun|f|declension=1s}}
# Arm (body part)
# Arm (body part)
# Weapon
# Weapon
{{br-decl-first-soft}}
{{br-decl-first-soft}}

Revision as of 15:41, 7 June 2022

Brittainese

Pronunciation

(Standard Brittainese) IPA(key): [ˈbrat͡ʃ]

Etymology 1

From Old Brittainese braces, brace, from Latin Bracchium. Ultimately from Ancient Greek βραχίων. Change of gender from masculine to feminine is regular for soft-stem neuters (and common for body pairs).

Noun

brace f first declension (plural braces)

  1. Arm (body part)
  2. Weapon
Conjugation of brace
singular plural
nominative brace braces
oblique brace braces