Bulgarian edit

Etymology edit

Borrowed from Romanian tobă, from Hungarian dob (to drum), of onomatopoeic origin.

Pronunciation edit

Noun edit

то́ба (tóbaf (dialectal, Vidin region)

  1. a type of percussion instrument (similar to drums)

Declension edit

Derived terms edit

See also edit

References edit

Tundra Nenets edit

 
Короваʼ тоба (1).

Etymology edit

From Proto-Samoyedic *topå.

Pronunciation edit

  • IPA(key): [tobʌ]
  • Hyphenation: то‧ба

Noun edit

тоба (toba)

  1. hoof
  2. (card games) hearts

Declension edit

Declension of тоба (toba) (regular)
singular dual plural
nominative тоба (toba) тобахӑʼ (tobaxăh) тобаˮ (tobaq)
genitive тобаʼ (tobah) тобахӑʼ (tobaxăh) тобˮ (tob)
accusative тобам (tobam°) тобахӑʼ (tobaxăh) тоб (tob°)
allative тобан (toban°) тобахӑняʼ (tobaxănyah) тобахӑˮ (tobaxăq)
locative тобахӑна (tobaxăna) тобахӑняна (tobaxănyana) тобахӑˮна (tobaxăqna)
ablative тобахӑд (tobaxăd°) тобахӑняд (tobaxănyad°) тобахӑт (tobaxăt°)
prolative тобавна (tobawna) тобахӑнямна (tobaxănyamna) тобˮмӑна (tobqmăna)

References edit

  • Pyrerka, A. P., Tereščenko, N. M. (1948) Русско-ненецкий словарь [Russian–Nenets Dictionary], Moscow: Огиз, page 335
  • N. M. Tereschenko (1965) “тоба”, in Ненецко-русский словарь, Moscow: Советская Энциклопедия