агнѧ
Old Church Slavonic
Alternative forms
- (Glagolitic): ⰰⰳⱀⱔ (agnę)
Etymology
From Proto-Slavic *agnę, from *agnъ + *-ę, from Proto-Indo-European *h₂egʷn-, the stem of *h₂egʷnós. Cognate with Latin agnus, Greek αμνός (amnós).
Synchronically as if suffixed with -ѧ (-ę).
Declension
Declension of агнѧ (nt-stem)
Singular | Dual | Plural | |
---|---|---|---|
Nominative | агнѧ agnę |
агнѧтѣ agnętě |
агнѧта agnęta |
Accusative | агнѧ agnę |
агнѧтѣ agnętě |
агнѧта agnęta |
Genitive | агнѧте agnęte |
агнѧтоу agnętu |
агнѧтъ agnętŭ |
Locative | агнѧте agnęte |
агнѧтоу agnętu |
агнѧтьхъ agnętĭxŭ |
Dative | агнѧти agnęti |
агнѧтьма agnętĭma |
агнѧтьмъ agnętĭmŭ |
Instrumental | агнѧтьмь agnętĭmĭ |
агнѧтьма agnętĭma |
агнѧтꙑ agnęty |
Vocative | агнѧ agnę |
агнѧтѣ agnętě |
агнѧта agnęta |
References
- Trajanov, Valentin (1999–2009), “агнѧ”, in Starobǎlgarski rečnik (in Bulgarian), Sofia
- Cejtlin, R.M.; Večerka, R.; Blagova, E., editors (1994), “агнѧ”, in Staroslavjanskij slovarʹ (po rukopisjam X—XI vekov) [Old Church Slavonic Dictionary (Based on 10–11th Century Manuscripts)], Moscow: Russkij jazyk
- Hauptova Z., editor (1958–1997), “агнѧ”, in Slovník jazyka staroslověnského (Lexicon linguae palaeoslovenicae), Prague: Euroslavica
- Halla-aho, Jussi (2006) Problems of Proto-Slavic Historical Nominal Morphology: On the Basis of Old Church Slavic (Slavica Helsingiensia; 26), Helsinki: University of Helsinki
- Derksen, Rick (2008) Etymological Dictionary of the Slavic Inherited Lexicon (Leiden Indo-European Etymological Dictionary Series; 4), Leiden, Boston: Brill, →ISBN
Old East Slavic
Alternative forms
- ꙗгнѧ (jagnę)
Etymology
From Proto-Slavic *agnę, from Proto-Indo-European *h₂egʷn-, the stem of *h₂egʷnós.
References
- Sreznevskij, I. I. (1893), “агнѧ”, in Materialy dlja slovarja drevne-russkago jazyka po pisʹmennym pamjatnikam [Materials for the Dictionary of the Old Russian Language According to Written Monuments] (in Russian), volume 1, Saint Petersburg: Imperial Academy of Sciences, page 6
This article is issued from Wiktionary. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.