Kalmyk edit

Etymology edit

Probably onomatopoeic.

Pronunciation edit

Noun edit

мис (mis)

  1. cat

Mariupol Greek edit

Etymology edit

Contraction of эми́с (emís), from Ancient Greek ἡμεῖς (hēmeîs). Cognate with Greek εμείς (emeís) (contracted μεις (meis)).

Pronunciation edit

  • IPA(key): [mʲɪs]
  • Hyphenation: мис

Pronoun edit

мис (mis) (emphatic form эми́с)

  1. we

Declension edit

Mariupol Greek personal pronouns
singular plural
1st 2nd 3rd m 3rd f 3rd n 1st 2nd 3rd
nominative го
(ho)
сы
(sy)
тос
(tos)
ты
(ty)
то
(to)
мис
(mis)
сыс
(sys)
тын
(tyn)
oblique мэ́на
(ména)
сэ́на
(séna)
то́на
(tóna)
ты́на
(týna)
мас
(mas)
сас
(sas)
тынц
(tync)
clitic -ми
(-mi)
-сы
(-sy)
-тун
(-tun)
-тын
(-tyn)
-ту
(-tu)
-мас
(-mas)
-сас
(-sas)

(-c)

References edit

  • G. A. Animica, M. P. Galikbarova (2013) Румеку глоса[1], Donetsk, page 4

Northern Khanty edit

 
Мис.

Etymology edit

Borrowed from Komi-Zyrian мӧс (mös), ultimately from Proto-Permic *mäs. Cognates include Eastern Khanty мӓс (mäs).

Pronunciation edit

Noun edit

мис (mis) (Kazym)

  1. cow

References edit

  • Solovar, V. N. (2014) “мис”, in Хантыйско-русский Словарь (казымский диалект) [Khanty-Russian Dictionary (Kazym Dialect)]‎[2], Khanty-Mansiysk: ООО «ФОРМАТ», →ISBN, page 179

Southern Altai edit

Etymology edit

From Proto-Turkic *bińŕ (awl). Cognate with Kazakh бiз (biz), Nogai биз (biz), Kyrgyz миз (miz, blade), Bashkir беҙ (beź), Tatar без (bez), Uzbek bigiz, Uyghur بېگىز (bëgiz, awl), Khakas піс (pìs), Tuvan бис (bis), etc.

Noun edit

мис (mis)

  1. blade

Tajik edit

Noun edit

мис (mis)

  1. copper

Ukrainian edit

Pronunciation edit

(file)

Noun edit

мис (mysm inan (genitive ми́су, nominative plural ми́си, genitive plural ми́сів)

  1. (geography) cape, headland, promontory

Declension edit