sobol
English edit
Pronunciation edit
Noun edit
sobol (plural sobols)
- Alternative form of sobole
- 1897, Lucius Elmer Sayre, A Manual of Organic Materia Medica and Pharmacognosy, page 25:
- Rhizomes are of two kinds, slender and fleshy. The slender rhizome, or sobol (Fig. 16), is popularly called the creeping stem of the plant.
- 1952, Henry Allan Gleason, The New Britton and Brown Illustrated Flora of the Northeastern United States and Adjacent Canada:
- Stems [...] erect or somewhat decumbent at base, rising from an elongate, rhizome-like, root-bearing organ, representing a sobol of the previous season.
Anagrams edit
Czech edit
Pronunciation edit
Noun edit
sobol m anim
- sable (mustelid)
Declension edit
This noun needs an inflection-table template.
Derived terms edit
adjectives
nouns
Further reading edit
Romanian edit
Etymology edit
Borrowed from Bulgarian соболец (sobolec).
Pronunciation edit
Noun edit
sobol m (plural soboli)
Declension edit
West Makian edit
Etymology edit
From East Makian sobal (“to sail”) with progressive vowel assimilation.
Pronunciation edit
Verb edit
sobol
- (intransitive) to sail
Conjugation edit
Conjugation of sobol (action verb) | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
singular | plural | |||
inclusive | exclusive | |||
1st person | tosobol | mosobol | asobol | |
2nd person | nosobol | fosobol | ||
3rd person | inanimate | isobol | dosobol | |
animate | ||||
imperative | nosobol, sobol | fosobol, sobol |
References edit
- Clemens Voorhoeve (1982) The Makian languages and their neighbours[1], Pacific linguistics