Esperanto edit

Etymology edit

nur (only, just) +‎ -a

Pronunciation edit

  • (file)
  • IPA(key): [ˈnura]

Adjective edit

nura (accusative singular nuran, plural nuraj, accusative plural nurajn)

  1. only

Ido edit

Etymology edit

From nur +‎ -a.

Pronunciation edit

Adjective edit

nura

  1. only, unique, exclusive (as in only child)

Latin edit

Noun edit

nura f (genitive nurae); first declension (Late Latin, proscribed)

  1. Alternative form of nurus (daughter-in-law)
    • 3rd–4th century, Appendix Probi, line 169:
      nurus non nura
      [The correct form is] nurus, not nura

Declension edit

First-declension noun.

Case Singular Plural
Nominative nura nurae
Genitive nurae nurārum
Dative nurae nurīs
Accusative nuram nurās
Ablative nurā nurīs
Vocative nura nurae

Descendants edit

  • Neapolitan: nura (Calabria, Basilicata)
  • Sardinian: nura
  • Vulgar Latin: *nŏra

References edit

Polish edit

Pronunciation edit

  • IPA(key): /ˈnu.ra/
  • Rhymes: -ura
  • Syllabification: nu‧ra

Noun edit

nura m animal

  1. genitive/accusative singular of nur

Sardinian edit

Etymology edit

From Late Latin nura, from Latin nurus, from Proto-Indo-European *snusós.

Noun edit

nura

  1. daughter-in-law

Turkish edit

Noun edit

nura

  1. dative singular of nur