Bulgarian Edit

Noun Edit

парази́т (parazítm (relational adjective парази́тен)

  1. parasite

Declension Edit

Kazakh Edit

Alternative scripts
Arabic پارازيت
Cyrillic паразит
Latin parazit

Etymology Edit

Borrowed from Russian парази́т (parazít), from French parasite, from Latin parasitus, from Ancient Greek παράσιτος (parásitos, person who eats at the table of another).

Pronunciation Edit

Noun Edit

паразит (parazit)

  1. parasite

Declension Edit

Derived terms Edit

Macedonian Edit

Pronunciation Edit

  • IPA(key): [paɾaˈzit]
  • (file)
  • Hyphenation: па‧ра‧зит

Noun Edit

парази́т (parazítm (plural парази́ти, relational adjective парази́тски)

  1. parasite

Declension Edit

References Edit

  • паразит” in Дигитален речник на македонскиот јазик (Digitalen rečnik na makedonskiot jazik) [Digital dictionary of the Macedonian language] − drmj.eu

Russian Edit

Etymology Edit

Borrowed from French parasite.

Pronunciation Edit

Noun Edit

парази́т (parazítm anim (genitive парази́та, nominative plural парази́ты, genitive plural парази́тов)

  1. parasite (organism)
  2. parasite (person)
  3. (derogatory) bad person
  4. (linguistics) filler word

Declension Edit

Related terms Edit

Serbo-Croatian Edit

Etymology Edit

From German Parasit, from Greek παράσιτος (parásitos).

Pronunciation Edit

  • IPA(key): /parǎziːt/
  • Hyphenation: pa‧ra‧zit

Noun Edit

пара̀зӣт m (Latin spelling paràzīt)

  1. parasite

Declension Edit

Derived terms Edit

Ukrainian Edit

 паразит (паразитизм) on Ukrainian Wikipedia

Etymology Edit

Borrowed from French parasite, from Latin parasītus, from Ancient Greek πᾰράσῑτος (parásītos).

Pronunciation Edit

Noun Edit

парази́т (parazýtm animal or m pers (genitive парази́та, nominative plural парази́ти, genitive plural парази́тів)

  1. parasite (organism)
  2. parasite (person)

Declension Edit

(animal):

(person):

Derived terms Edit

Further reading Edit