diábel
Old Czech
editAlternative forms
editEtymology
editLearned borrowing from Latin diabolus.
Pronunciation
editNoun
editdiábel m pers
Declension
editDeclension of diábel (hard o-stem reducible)
singular | dual | plural | |
---|---|---|---|
nominative | diábel | diábly | diábli, diáblové |
genitive | diábla | diáblú | diáblóv |
dative | diáblu, diáblovi | diábloma | diáblóm |
accusative | diábla | diábly | diábly |
vocative | diáble | diábly | diábli, diáblové |
locative | diáblu, diáblovi | diáblú | diábléch |
instrumental | diáblem | diábloma | diábly |
See also Appendix:Old Czech nouns and Appendix:Old Czech pronunciation.
Descendants
edit- Czech: ďábel
- Old Polish: dyjabeł, diabeł, dyjaboł
- Masurian: diábeł, diábół, dłábuł, (in phrases) diácheł
- Polish: diabeł, dyjabeł, dejabeł, dyjaboł, diacheł (Middle Polish); dyabeł (Pre-reform orthography (1816)); djabeł (Pre-reform orthography (1936))
- Silesian: diŏboł, djoboł (Steuers Silesian alphabet); dioboł (simplified); dzioboł, deboł
References
edit- Jan Gebauer (1903–1916) “diábel”, in Slovník staročeský (in Czech), Prague: Česká grafická společnost "unie", Česká akademie císaře Františka Josefa pro vědy, slovesnost a umění
Categories:
- Old Czech terms derived from Proto-Indo-European
- Old Czech terms derived from Proto-Hellenic
- Old Czech terms derived from the Proto-Indo-European word *dwóh₁
- Old Czech learned borrowings from Latin
- Old Czech terms derived from Latin
- Old Czech terms derived from Ancient Greek
- Old Czech terms borrowed from Latin
- Old Czech terms derived from the Proto-Indo-European word *dwís (twice)
- Old Czech terms with IPA pronunciation
- Old Czech lemmas
- Old Czech nouns
- Old Czech masculine nouns
- Old Czech personal nouns
- zlw-ocs:Religion
- Old Czech nouns with actual gender different from declined gender
- Old Czech masculine personal nouns
- Old Czech hard masculine o-stem nouns
- Old Czech nouns with reducible stem
- zlw-ocs:Mythological creatures