Bashkir

edit

Etymology

edit

From Russian но́рма (nórma), from German Norm and/or French norme, from Latin norma (a carpenter's square, a rule, a pattern, a precept).

Pronunciation

edit
  • IPA(key): [no̞r.ˈmä]
  • Hyphenation: нор‧ма

Noun

edit

норма (norma)

  1. norm, standard
    Тел нормаһы.
    Tel normahı.
    The language standard.
    Салауат — башҡорт үҙаңының нормаһы.
    Salawat — başqort üźañınıñ normahı.
    Salawat (Yulayev) is the standard of Bashkir (ethnic) self-identity.
  2. rate, quota
    Көндәлек норма.
    Köndəlek norma.
    The daily rate.

Declension

edit

Kazakh

edit
Alternative scripts
Arabic نورما
Cyrillic норма
Latin norma

Etymology

edit

From Russian но́рма (nórma), from German Norm and/or French norme, from Latin norma (a carpenter's square, a rule, a pattern, a precept).

Noun

edit

норма (norma)

  1. norm, standard
  2. rate, quota

Declension

edit

Derived terms

edit

Macedonian

edit

Pronunciation

edit

Noun

edit

норма (normaf (relational adjective нормален or нормативен)

  1. norm

Declension

edit

Russian

edit
 
Russian Wikipedia has an article on:
Wikipedia ru

Etymology

edit

Borrowed from Latin norma.

Pronunciation

edit
  • IPA(key): [ˈnormə]
  • Audio:(file)

Noun

edit

но́рма (nórmaf inan (genitive но́рмы, nominative plural но́рмы, genitive plural норм)

  1. norm, standard
  2. rate, quota

Declension

edit
edit

Descendants

edit
  • Bashkir: норма (norma)
  • Ingrian: norma
  • Japanese: ノルマ
  • Kazakh: норма (norma)
  • Korean: 노르마 (noreuma)
  • Yakut: нуорма (nuorma)

Serbo-Croatian

edit

Pronunciation

edit
  • IPA(key): /nôːrma/
  • Hyphenation: но‧рма

Noun

edit

но̑рма f (Latin spelling nȏrma)

  1. rule
  2. norm

Declension

edit

Ukrainian

edit

Pronunciation

edit

Noun

edit

но́рма (nórmaf inan (genitive но́рми, nominative plural но́рми, genitive plural норм)

  1. norm, standard, rule
  2. rate, quota

Declension

edit

References

edit