See also: tab, Tab, TAB, t.a.b., t-ab, and Тав

Central Mansi edit

Etymology edit

From the same Proto-Finno-Ugric root *se[1] as Hungarian ő (he, she), Finnish hän, Northern Mansi тав (taw) and Southern Mansi [script needed] (tüw).

Pronunciation edit

Pronoun edit

тав (taw) (Konda)

  1. he, she, it

Declension edit

This pronoun needs an inflection-table template.

See also edit

Eastern Mansi personal pronouns
singular dual plural
1st person ам (am) мен (men), менг (meng) ман (man)
2nd person нанг (nang), нан (nan), най (naj), нян (nân) нэй (nèj) нан (nan)
3rd person тав (taw) тэн (tèn) тан (tan)

References edit

  1. ^ Entry #919 in Uralonet, online Uralic etymological database of the Hungarian Research Centre for Linguistics.
  • E. A. Kuzakova (2001) “тав”, in Мансийско-русский словарь (кондинский диалект мансийского языка), По рассказу П. К. Чейметова «Ворыяп хумый» («Два охотника») [Mansi-Russian dictionary (Kondinsky dialect of the Mansi language), Based on the story by P. K. Cheymetov “Ворыяп хумый” (“Two Hunters”)]‎[1], Kondinsky district: local history museum, →ISBN, page 50

Kumyk edit

Noun edit

тав (taw)

  1. mountain

Declension edit

Mongolian edit

Etymology 1 edit

MongolianCyrillic
ᠲᠠᠪᠤ
(tabu)
тав
(tav)
Mongolian numbers (edit)
50
 ←  4 5 6  → 
    Cardinal: тав (tav)
    Attributive: таван (tavan)
    Ordinal: тавдугаар (tavdugaar), тав дахь (tav daxʹ), тавдагч (tavdagč)
    Adverbial: тавантаа (tavantaa)
    Distributive: таваад (tavaad)
    Collective: тавуул (tavuul)
    Maximative: таваар (tavaar)

From Classical Mongolian ᠲᠠᠪᠤ (tabu), from Middle Mongol ᠲᠠᠪᠤ (tabu), from Proto-Mongolic *tabun. Cognate with Buryat табан (taban), Kalmyk тавн (tavn), Dongxiang tawun.

Pronunciation edit

Numeral edit

тав (tav)

  1. five
  2. fifth day of the month
Derived terms edit
Related terms edit

Etymology 2 edit

MongolianCyrillic
ᠲᠠᠪᠠ
(taba)
тав
(tav)

(This etymology is missing or incomplete. Please add to it, or discuss it at the Etymology scriptorium.)

Pronunciation edit

Noun edit

тав (tav)

  1. comfort; peace
  2. schadenfreude

Etymology 3 edit

MongolianCyrillic
ᠲᠠᠪ
(tab)
тав
(tav)

(This etymology is missing or incomplete. Please add to it, or discuss it at the Etymology scriptorium.)

Pronunciation edit

Noun edit

тав (tav)

  1. rivet
  2. nailhead
  3. scab; crust
  4. tuft of hair

Northern Mansi edit

Etymology edit

From the same Proto-Finno-Ugric root *se[1] as Hungarian ő (he, she), Finnish hän, Eastern Mansi тав (taw) and Southern Mansi [script needed] (tüw).

Pronoun edit

тав (taw) (Sosva)

  1. he, she, it

Declension edit

Declension of тав
nominative тав (taw)
accusative таве (tawe)
dative тавен (tawen)
ablative тавеныл (tawenyl)
comitative-instrumental таветыл (tawetyl)

See also edit

Northern Mansi personal pronouns
singular dual plural
1st person ам (am) ме̄н (mēn) ма̄н (mān)
2nd person наӈ (naň) нэ̄н (nè̄n) на̄н (nān)
3rd person тав (taw) тэ̄н (tè̄n) та̄н (tān)

References edit

  • Afanasʹjeva, K. V., Sobjanina, S. A. (2012) “тав”, in Školʹnyj mansijsko-russkij slovarʹ) [Mansi-Russian school dictionary], Khanty-Mansiysk: RIO IRO
  • Mansi dictionary of Munkácsi and Kálmán [2]
  1. ^ Entry #919 in Uralonet, online Uralic etymological database of the Hungarian Research Centre for Linguistics.

Russian edit

Etymology edit

From Hebrew.

Pronunciation edit

Noun edit

тав (tavm inan (genitive та́ва, nominative plural та́вы, genitive plural та́вов)

  1. taw, the last letter of the Hebrew alphabet.

Declension edit