Old Church Slavonic

edit

Etymology

edit

From Proto-Slavic *slědъ (track, trace).

Noun

edit

слѣдъ (slědŭm

  1. trace, track

Old East Slavic

edit

Etymology

edit

From Proto-Slavic *slědъ (track, trace).

Noun

edit

слѣдъ (slědŭm[1]

  1. trace, track

Inflection

edit

Accent paradigm c.

Descendants

edit
  • Belarusian: след (sljed)
  • Russian: след (sled)
  • Ukrainian: слід (slid)

References

edit
  1. ^ Zaliznjak, Andrej A. (2014) “Drevnerusskoje udarenije. Obščije svedenija i slovarʹ”, in Languages of Slavic Culture[1] (in Russian), Moscow: Institute for Slavic Studies of the Russian Academy of Sciences, page 465:слѣ́дъslě́d

Russian

edit

Noun

edit

слѣдъ (slědm inan (genitive слѣ́да, nominative plural слѣды́, genitive plural слѣдо́въ)

  1. Pre-1918 spelling of след (sled).

Declension

edit