-uyo

Ido

Etymology

From Esperanto -ujo, from French étui, German Etui. Also considered a back-formation from etuyo (masculine).[1] Also paronym to etuyo.

Suffix

-uyo

  1. suffix used with a nominal root to denote a receptacle, ordinarily a case, box, chest or sheath
    violino (violin) + -uyoviolinuyo (violin case)

Usage notes

Distinguish -uyo from -iero: sigaruyo = a case for cigars; sigariero = a short tube for smoking a cigar.

Paronyms

Derived terms

<a class='CategoryTreeLabel CategoryTreeLabelNs14 CategoryTreeLabelCategory' href='/wiki/Category:Ido_words_suffixed_with_-uyo' title='Category:Ido words suffixed with -uyo'>Ido words suffixed with -uyo</a>

References

  1. “Sufixi. (ik-yun)”, in Kompleta gramatiko detaloza (in Ido), accessed 2016-08-21
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