ся
Bulgarian edit
Adverb edit
ся • (sja)
- Alternative spelling of с'я (s'ja)
Usage notes edit
Spelling contracted words without the apostrophe is non-standard, but is actually the more common way to spell them colloquially, especially so on the internet. Since с'я is itself colloquial, it is rare to see it written with an apostrophe.
Moksha edit
Etymology edit
From Proto-Mordvinic *śe, from Proto-Uralic *śe (“it”). Cognates include Erzya се (śe), Finnish se, Estonian see.[1]
Pronunciation edit
Pronoun edit
ся • (śa)
- (demonstrative) that
- V. I. Ščankina (2011) Russko-mokšansko-erzjanskij slovarʹ [Russian-Moksha-Erzya Dictionary], Saransk, →ISBN
- ся и тона
- śa i tona
- that and the other
- сяда меле
- śada meľe
- after that
- сянкса, сянкса штоба, сянь кувалма
- śanksa , śanksa štoba, śań kuvalma
- because of that, as a consequence (of that)
- сяс мес
- śas mes
- because
- сяс, сянкса
- śas , śanksa
- therefore
- эста, ся пингть
- esta, śa pingť
- at that time (lit. "of that time")
- V. I. Ščankina (2011) Russko-mokšansko-erzjanskij slovarʹ [Russian-Moksha-Erzya Dictionary], Saransk, →ISBN
Declension edit
Indefinite declension of ся
singular | plural | |
---|---|---|
nominative | ся (śa) | сят (śat) |
genitive | сянь (śań) | сятнень (śatńeń) |
dative | сянди (śanďi) | сятненди (śatńenďi) |
ablative | сяда (śada) | — |
inessive | — | — |
elative | — | — |
illative | сяс (śas) | — |
prolative | — | — |
comparative | сяшка (śaška) | — |
translative | — | — |
abessive | сяфтома (śaftoma) | — |
causative | сянкса (śanksa) | — |
Derived terms edit
References edit
Russian edit
Etymology edit
Contracted from себя́ (sebjá) and probably not a direct descendant of Proto-Slavic *sę (whence -ся (-sja)) or Old Church Slavonic сѧ (sę).
Pronunciation edit
Pronoun edit
ся • (sja)
- (colloquial) Contraction of себя́ (sebjá).