лакът
Bulgarian edit
Etymology edit
From Proto-Slavic *olkъtь, ultimately from Proto-Indo-European *Heh₃l-.
Pronunciation edit
Noun edit
ла́кът • (lákǎt) m (relational adjective ла́кътен)
Declension edit
Declension of ла́кът
Alternative forms edit
- лакт (lakt) — colloquial, contracted
- ла́къть (lákǎtʹ) — hypercorrect and in dialects which preserve final -ь
- ла́кат (lákat), ла́кать (lákatʹ) — dialectal
- ла́кет (láket), ла́кят (lákjat) — Eastern dialects
- ла́кот (lákot), ла́кекь (lákekʹ) — Western dialects
Derived terms edit
- лъкату́ша (lǎkatúša, “to zigzag, to slither, to wind (of road, trajectory)”) (< earlier лакъту́ша (lakǎtúša))
- лаку́тка (lakútka), лакъту́шка (lakǎtúška, “arch, bending”) (dialectal)
- нала́кътник (nalákǎtnik, “elbow protector/bracelet”)
Related terms edit
- лак m (lak), ла́ко n (láko, “ell, elbow”) (dialectal, obsolescent)
- ла́цам (lácam, “to hang, to dangle”) (dialectal)
References edit
- “лакът”, in Речник на българския език [Dictionary of the Bulgarian Language] (in Bulgarian), Sofia: Bulgarian Academy of Sciences, 2014
- “лакът”, in Речник на българския език [Dictionary of the Bulgarian Language] (in Bulgarian), Chitanka, 2010
- Nayden Gerov (1899) “ла́къть, мн. ла́ктѥ”, in Рѣчникъ на Блъгарскꙑй язꙑкъ. Съ тлъкувание рѣчи-тꙑ на Блъгарскꙑ и на Русскꙑ. [Dictionary of the Bulgarian language][1] (in Bulgarian), volume 3, Plovdiv: Дружествена печꙗтница "Съгласие.", page 3