Buryat edit

Etymology edit

From Chinese.

Pronunciation edit

Noun edit

луу (luu)

  1. (mythology) dragon
    луу жэлluu želyear of the Dragon

Declension edit

This noun needs an inflection-table template.

Mongolian edit

Etymology 1 edit

MongolianCyrillic
ᠯᠤᠤ
(luu)
луу
(luu)
 
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Inherited from Classical Mongolian ᠯᠤᠤ (luu), from Middle Mongol ᠯᠤᠤ (luu), borrowed from Old Turkic 𐰠𐰇 (l²ü /⁠lü⁠/) which in turn is ultimately from Chinese (lóng). The absence of the final suggests an intermediary language without a final which Alexander Vovin suggests is Rouran. Compare Buryat луу (luu), Kalmyk лу (lu); Khitan 𘭑 (*lu /⁠lu⁠/); Tuvan улу (ulu), Southern Altai улуу (uluu), Kyrgyz улуу (uluu), Kazakh ұлу (ūlu); Tibetan ཀླུ (klu); replaced native Mongolic [Term?].

Pronunciation edit

  • IPA(key): [ɮo̙ː]
  • Hyphenation: луу

Noun edit

луу (luu)

  1. (mythology) a dragon
    луу жилluu žilyear of the Dragon
Declension edit
Derived terms edit

Etymology 2 edit

MongolianCyrillic
ᠤᠷᠤᠭᠤ
(uruɣu)
луу
(luu)

Pronunciation edit

  • IPA(key): [ɮo̙ː]
  • Hyphenation: луу

Postposition edit

луу (luu)

  1. Marks the directive case after a stem ending in the consonant р (r).
    Synonym: -аад (-aad)
    Alternative form: руу (ruu)
Usage notes edit
  • Due to its recent development as a grammatical case, directive case suffixes are written with a space between the stem and suffix.
  • Generally equivalent to the English term down to.
Inflection edit