верста
Russian
Etymology
Inherited from Old East Slavic вьрста (vĭrsta), from Proto-Slavic *vȇrstъ. Cognate with Ukrainian верства́ (verstvá), Old East Slavic вьрста (vĭrsta, “age, couple, age-mate, verst (measure of length)”), Old Church Slavonic врьста (vrĭsta, “age”), Bulgarian връст (vrǎst, “age”), Serbo-Croatian вр́ста (“row, type”), Slovene vŕsta (“row, string, type, age”) (tonal orthography), vȓst (“row, type”) (tonal orthography), Czech vrstva (“layer”), Slovak vrstva, Polish warstwa (“row, layer”), Upper Sorbian woršta. Cognate with Russian верте́ть (vertétʹ, “to turn”); per Vasmer, the initial meaning was "turning over of a plow". Further cognate with Lithuanian var̃stas (“verst, distance plowed at one time in one direction”) (also varsnà), participial vir̃stas, Oscan vorsus (“measure of arable land”, literally “turning over”), Latin versus (earlier vorsus), Sanskrit वृत्त (vṛttá, “round, twisted”). Compare све́рстник (svérstnik, “coeval, age-mate”).
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): [vʲɪrˈsta]
Audio (file)
Declension
Derived terms
- верстово́й (verstovój)
- верстоме́р (verstomér)
- многовёрстный (mnogovjórstnyj)
Related terms
- верста́ть impf (verstátʹ), сверста́ть pf (sverstátʹ)
- навёрстывать impf (navjórstyvatʹ), наверста́ть pf (naverstátʹ)
- верста́льщик m (verstálʹščik)
- вёрстка f (vjórstka)
References
- Vasmer, Max (1964–1973), “верста”, in Etimologičeskij slovarʹ russkovo jazyka [Etymological Dictionary of the Russian Language] (in Russian), translated from German and supplemented by Trubačóv O. N., Moscow: Progress