Ꙗкоуне
Old Novgorodian
editAlternative forms
edit- Ꙗкоунь (Jakunĭ)
Etymology
editFirst attested in c. 1160‒1180. From Old East Slavic-Varangian given name, borrowed from Old Norse Hákon. Compare Swedish Håkan, Icelandic Hákon, Norwegian Nynorsk Håkon.
Pronunciation
edit- Hyphenation: Ꙗ‧коу‧не
Proper noun
edit- a male given name
Declension
editDeclension of Ꙗкоуне (hard o-stem)
singular | dual | plural | |
---|---|---|---|
nominative | Ꙗкоуне Jakune |
Ꙗкоуна Jakuna |
Ꙗкоуни, Ꙗкоунѣ Jakuni, Jakuně |
genitive | Ꙗкоуна Jakuna |
Ꙗкоуноу Jakunu |
Ꙗкоунъ Jakunŭ |
dative | Ꙗкоуноу, Ꙗкоунови Jakunu, Jakunovi |
Ꙗкоунома Jakunoma |
Ꙗкоуномъ Jakunomŭ |
accusative | Ꙗкоунъ, Ꙗкоуна Jakunŭ, Jakuna |
Ꙗкоуна Jakuna |
Ꙗкоунꙑ, Ꙗкоунѣ Jakuny, Jakuně |
instrumental | Ꙗкоунъмь Jakunŭmĭ |
Ꙗкоунома Jakunoma |
Ꙗкоунꙑ Jakuny |
locative | Ꙗкоунѣ Jakuně |
Ꙗкоуноу Jakunu |
Ꙗкоунѣхъ Jakuněxŭ |
vocative | Ꙗкоуне Jakune |
Ꙗкоуна Jakuna |
Ꙗкоуни, Ꙗкоунѣ Jakuni, Jakuně |
Derived terms
editadjectives
- Ꙗкоунове (Jakunove)
nouns
- Ꙗкоуноваꙗ (Jakunovaja)
References
edit- ^ Zaliznyak, Andrey (2004) Древненовгородский диалект [Old Novgorod dialect][1] (in Russian), 2nd edition, Moscow: LRC Publishing House, →ISBN, page 821
Further reading
edit- “Ꙗкоуне”, in “Birchbark Letters Corpus”, in Russian National Corpus, https://ruscorpora.ru, 2003–2025