Hungarian edit

 
Hungarian Wikipedia has an article on:
Wikipedia hu

Etymology edit

From Late Latin Dominicus, derived from Dominus (Lord).

Pronunciation edit

  • IPA(key): [ˈdomoŋkoʃ]
  • Hyphenation: Do‧mon‧kos
  • Rhymes: -oʃ

Proper noun edit

Domonkos

  1. a male given name from Latin, equivalent to English Dominic

Declension edit

Inflection (stem in -o-, back harmony)
singular plural
nominative Domonkos Domonkosok
accusative Domonkost Domonkosokat
dative Domonkosnak Domonkosoknak
instrumental Domonkossal Domonkosokkal
causal-final Domonkosért Domonkosokért
translative Domonkossá Domonkosokká
terminative Domonkosig Domonkosokig
essive-formal Domonkosként Domonkosokként
essive-modal
inessive Domonkosban Domonkosokban
superessive Domonkoson Domonkosokon
adessive Domonkosnál Domonkosoknál
illative Domonkosba Domonkosokba
sublative Domonkosra Domonkosokra
allative Domonkoshoz Domonkosokhoz
elative Domonkosból Domonkosokból
delative Domonkosról Domonkosokról
ablative Domonkostól Domonkosoktól
non-attributive
possessive - singular
Domonkosé Domonkosoké
non-attributive
possessive - plural
Domonkoséi Domonkosokéi
Possessive forms of Domonkos
possessor single possession multiple possessions
1st person sing. Domonkosom Domonkosaim
2nd person sing. Domonkosod Domonkosaid
3rd person sing. Domonkosa Domonkosai
1st person plural Domonkosunk Domonkosaink
2nd person plural Domonkosotok Domonkosaitok
3rd person plural Domonkosuk Domonkosaik

Derived terms edit

Compound words