parchant
Czech edit
Etymology edit
A change from the original panchart, which comes from the derisive Middle High German banchart, bankhart meaning left-sided, literally something like "a child born on a bench". Compare e.g. bastard, Gerhard, Reinhard, also e.g. the German Bank and the French suffix -ard.
Pronunciation edit
Noun edit
parchant m anim
- bastard (person born to unmarried parents)
- Synonym: levoboček
- bastard (objectionable person)
- Synonym: darebák
Declension edit
Declension of parchant (hard masculine animate)
singular | plural | |
---|---|---|
nominative | parchant | parchanti |
genitive | parchanta | parchantů |
dative | parchantovi, parchantu | parchantům |
accusative | parchanta | parchanty |
vocative | parchante | parchanti |
locative | parchantovi, parchantu | parchantech |
instrumental | parchantem | parchanty |
Noun edit
parchant m inan
Declension edit
Declension of parchant (hard masculine inanimate)
singular | plural | |
---|---|---|
nominative | parchant | parchanty |
genitive | parchanta, parchantu | parchantů |
dative | parchantu | parchantům |
accusative | parchant | parchanty |
vocative | parchante | parchanty |
locative | parchantu | parchantech |
instrumental | parchantem | parchanty |