һеаваш
Akkala Sami edit
The spelling of this entry has been normalized from h́eavaš according to the principles established by Wiktionary's editor community as described at Wiktionary:About Akkala Sami or recent spelling standards of the language.
Alternative forms edit
- һеабаш (h’eabaš)
Etymology edit
Related to Finnish hevonen. Compare Skolt Sami heävaš, Inari Sami hiävuš, Kildin Sami е̄бешь (jieb’eš’) and Northern Sami heavuš.
Pronunciation edit
Noun edit
һеаваш (h’eavaš)
Inflection edit
The template Template:sia-infl-noun does not use the parameter(s):nom_s=һеавашPlease see Module:checkparams for help with this warning.
Inflection of һеаваш | ||
---|---|---|
Nominative | һеаваш (h’eavaš) | |
Genitive | һеаппаш (h’eappaš) | |
singular | plural | |
Nominative | һеаваш (h’eavaš) | һеаппаш[1] (h’eappaš) |
Accusative | һеаппаш (h’eappaš) | һеаппшӹ (h’eappšï) |
Genitive | һеаппаш (h’eappaš) | һеаппшӹ (h’eappšï) |
Illative | һеаппша[2] (h’eappša) | һеаппшӹ (h’eappšï) |
Locative | [Term?] | [Term?] |
Comitative | [Term?] | [Term?] |
Abessive | [Term?] | [Term?] |
Essive | [Term?] | |
Partitive | [Term?] |
References edit
- ^ P. M. Zajkov (1987) “h́ĕăp̄aš”, in G. M. Kert, editor, Бабинский диалект саамского языка (фонолого-морфологическое исследование) [Babin dialect of the Sami language], Petrozavodsk: Карельский филиал АН СССР; Институт языка, литературы и истории, page 132
- ^ P. M. Zajkov (1987) “h́ĕăp̄ša”, in G. M. Kert, editor, Бабинский диалект саамского языка (фонолого-морфологическое исследование) [Babin dialect of the Sami language], Petrozavodsk: Карельский филиал АН СССР; Институт языка, литературы и истории, page 42
Further reading edit
- P. M. Zajkov (1987) G. M. Kert, editor, Бабинский диалект саамского языка (фонолого-морфологическое исследование) [Babin dialect of the Sami language], Petrozavodsk: Карельский филиал АН СССР; Институт языка, литературы и истории, pages 40, 24
- Koponen, Eino, Ruppel, Klaas, Aapala, Kirsti, editors (2002–2008), “hjäbaš”, in Álgu database: Etymological database of the Saami languages[1], Helsinki: Research Institute for the Languages of Finland