laivas
Latvian edit
Noun edit
laivas f
- inflection of laiva:
Lithuanian edit
Etymology edit
Variants include dialectal laĩvė, archaic laĩva. Latvian laiva is cognate. The relationship by borrowing to Proto-Finnic *laiva (Finnish laiva “ship; nave”, Estonian laev, Livonian lōja) is also undisputed, leaving the question of which family had the word first. It is now identified as a borrowing from Proto-Germanic *flawją (cf. Old Norse fley “boat,” “raft”) into Finnic and thence Baltic, showing the Finnic sound law *vj > jv established by Koivulehto (1970).[1] Earlier, a Baltic inherited origin had been sought. Karulis took the word to be perhaps originally used by Curonian fishermen and later spread to all the Eastern shore of the Baltic Sea, and offered the internal etymology Proto-Baltic *leiw-, *laiw-, from Proto-Indo-European *ley- with an extra -w, from *el-ey, from *Heh₃l- (“to bend, to turn”); this theory would make the original meaning “bent, concave (object)”.[2]
Noun edit
laĩvas m (plural laivaĩ) stress pattern 4
- ship (large water vessel)
Declension edit
singular (vienaskaita) | plural (daugiskaita) | |
---|---|---|
nominative (vardininkas) | laĩvas | laivaĩ |
genitive (kilmininkas) | laĩvo | laivų̃ |
dative (naudininkas) | laĩvui | laiváms |
accusative (galininkas) | laĩvą | laivùs |
instrumental (įnagininkas) | laivù | laivaĩs |
locative (vietininkas) | laivè | laivuosè |
vocative (šauksmininkas) | laĩve | laivaĩ |
References edit
- ^ Koivulehto (1970), Suomen laiva-sanasta
- ^ Karulis, Konstantīns (1992) “laivas”, in Latviešu Etimoloģijas Vārdnīca (in Latvian), Rīga: AVOTS, →ISBN