autorius
Lithuanian edit
Etymology edit
Ultimately from New Latin autor, from Latin auctor. Compare Latvian autors, Polish autor, German Autor. This etymology is incomplete. You can help Wiktionary by elaborating on the origins of this term. Likely borrowed via Polish and/or German but references for that claim would be good.
Noun edit
áutorius m (plural áutoriai, feminine autorė) stress pattern 1
Declension edit
Declension of áutorius
singular (vienaskaita) | plural (daugiskaita) | |
---|---|---|
nominative (vardininkas) | áutorius | áutoriai |
genitive (kilmininkas) | áutoriaus | áutorių |
dative (naudininkas) | áutoriui | áutoriams |
accusative (galininkas) | áutorių | áutorius |
instrumental (įnagininkas) | áutoriumi | áutoriais |
locative (vietininkas) | áutoriuje | áutoriuose |
vocative (šauksmininkas) | áutoriau | áutoriai |
References edit
- “autorius”, in Lietuvių kalbos žodynas [Dictionary of the Lithuanian language], lkz.lt, 1941–2024
- “autorius”, in Dabartinės lietuvių kalbos žodynas [Dictionary of contemporary Lithuanian], ekalba.lt, 1954–2024