Contionary:seele: Difference between revisions
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
(Created page with "==Skundavisk== ===Etymology=== From Middle Skundavisk ''sēle'', ''sēlue'', from Old Skundavisk ''sēlō'', seielō'', from Halmisk ''saielō'', ''saiwelō'', from Proto-Germ...") |
|||
Line 7: | Line 7: | ||
===Noun=== | ===Noun=== | ||
'''seele''' ''f.'' (''genitive'' '''seele''', ''plural'' '''seeler''') | '''seele''' ''f.'' (class 2, ''genitive'' '''seele''', ''plural'' '''seeler''') | ||
# soul | # soul | ||
Line 18: | Line 18: | ||
====Related terms==== | ====Related terms==== | ||
[[Category:Contionary]] [[Category:Skundavisk words]] [[Category:Skundavisk nouns]] | [[Category:Contionary]] [[Category:Skundavisk words]] [[Category:Skundavisk nouns]] [[Category:Skundavisk class 2 nouns]] |
Revision as of 02:57, 29 December 2018
Skundavisk
Etymology
From Middle Skundavisk sēle, sēlue, from Old Skundavisk sēlō, seielō, from Halmisk saielō, saiwelō, from Proto-Germanic *saiwalō.
Pronunciation
IPA: /se:lə/
Noun
seele f. (class 2, genitive seele, plural seeler)
- soul
- Mijne seele is drøf.
- My soul is troubled.
- Mijne seele is drøf.