See also: сѫбота

Belarusian edit

 
Belarusian Wikipedia has an article on:
Wikipedia be

Etymology edit

From Proto-Slavic *sǫbota.

Pronunciation edit

  • IPA(key): [suˈbota]
  • (file)

Noun edit

субо́та (subótaf inan (genitive субо́ты, nominative plural субо́ты, genitive plural субо́т or субо́таў)

  1. Saturday

Declension edit

See also edit

Serbo-Croatian edit

Pronunciation edit

  • IPA(key): /sǔbota/
  • Hyphenation: су‧бо‧та

Noun edit

су̀бота f (Latin spelling sùbota)

  1. Saturday

Declension edit

Ukrainian edit

Etymology edit

From Old East Slavic субота (subota), from Byzantine Greek *σάμβατον (*sámbaton), from Ancient Greek σάββατα (sábbata), from Aramaic שַׁבְּתָא (šabbǝtā) or Hebrew שַׁבָּת (šabbāṯ). Cognates include Russian суббо́та (subbóta), Belarusian субо́та (subóta), Old Church Slavonic сѫбота (sǫbota), Bulgarian съ́бота (sǎ́bota), Serbo-Croatian су́бота.

Compare with Old Church Slavonic собота (sobota) (Czech sobota, Slovak sobota, Polabian sobota, Polish sobota, Silesian sobota, Lower Sorbian sobota, Upper Sorbian sobota, Slovene sobota) which is from Medieval Latin sabbatum (cf. sabbata (the seventh day, Sabbath) [1]), from Ancient Greek σάββατα (sábbata) (freq. in pl. of the single).

Pronunciation edit

Noun edit

субо́та (subótaf inan (genitive субо́ти, nominative plural субо́ти, genitive plural субо́т, relational adjective субо́тній)

  1. Saturday
    у субо́туu subótuon Saturday

Declension edit

Derived terms edit

See also edit

References edit