кӧт
Eastern Khanty edit
Alternative forms edit
Etymology edit
From Proto-Uralic *käte. Cognates include Northern Mansi ка̄т (kāt), Hungarian kéz and Finnish käsi.
Pronunciation edit
Noun edit
References edit
- Volkova, A. N., Solovar, V. N. (2016) “кӧт”, in Краткий русско-хантыйский словарь (сургутский диалект) [Short Russian-Khanty Dictionary (Surgut dialect)][1] (in Russian), Khanty-Mansiysk: Югорский формат, →ISBN, page 76
- Terjóškin, N. I., Spodina, V. I. (1997) “кӧт”, in Словарь хантыйско-русский и русско-хантыйский (ваховский диалект) [Khanty-Russian and Russian-Khanty Dictionary (Vakh dialect)], Nizhnevartovsk: Уральская государственная лесотехническая академия, →ISBN, page 44
Southern Selkup edit
< 9 | 10 | 11 > |
---|---|---|
Cardinal : кӧт Ordinal : кӧ́тэмҗэл | ||
Chumel dialects | |
---|---|
Narym | кӧт |
Tyuj dialects | |
Upper Ob | кiод |
Etymology edit
From Proto-Selkup *kȫt, from Proto-Samoyedic *wüt, from Proto-Uralic *witte.
Compare Northern Selkup кёт (kjot). Cognates include Kamassian бйәʼ (bjəʔ) and Finnish viisi (“five”).
Numeral edit
кӧт (köt) (Narym)
- ten
- 2022, Grigorij Korotkih, Современный язык нарымских селькупов (overall work in Russian), page 64:
- Ӄва́ҷэт ҷанҗ кӧт халҗ калэмба́
- There's ten kilometres left before the city
Further reading edit
- G.V. Korotkih (2022) Современный язык нарымских селькупов [The modern language of Narym Selkups], Tomsk: Соиздательство ценных книг «Грасион», →ISBN, page 67 of 150