Sardinia
English
Etymology
Borrowing from Latin Sardinia, from Ancient Greek Σαρδώ (Sardṓ), from its name in a pre-Roman substrate language, *sard, *shard. It is connected by some scholars to the name of the Sherden or Shardana Sea People. A Phoenician inscription found in Nora and dated to the 9th century BCE identifies the island as shardan.[1]
Pronunciation
- (General American) IPA(key): /sɑɹˈdɪniə/
- (General American) IPA(key): /sɑːˈdɪnɪə/
- Hyphenation: Sar‧din‧ia
Proper noun
Sardinia
Translations
island of Italy
|
|
References
- The Cambridge Ancient History →ISBN, page 369: "In the earliest Phoenician inscription found in Sardinia, that from Nora, probably of the ninth century B.C., although it is incomplete, the name of the island appears as Shardan (be-shardan), [...]"
Finnish
Declension
Inflection of Sardinia (Kotus type 12/kulkija, no gradation) | |||
---|---|---|---|
nominative | Sardinia | — | |
genitive | Sardinian | — | |
partitive | Sardiniaa | — | |
illative | Sardiniaan | — | |
singular | plural | ||
nominative | Sardinia | — | |
accusative | nom. | Sardinia | — |
gen. | Sardinian | ||
genitive | Sardinian | — | |
partitive | Sardiniaa | — | |
inessive | Sardiniassa | — | |
elative | Sardiniasta | — | |
illative | Sardiniaan | — | |
adessive | Sardinialla | — | |
ablative | Sardinialta | — | |
allative | Sardinialle | — | |
essive | Sardiniana | — | |
translative | Sardiniaksi | — | |
instructive | — | — | |
abessive | Sardiniatta | — | |
comitative | — | — |
Latin
Etymology
From Ancient Greek Σαρδώ (Sardṓ).
Inflection
First declension, with locative.
Case | Singular |
---|---|
Nominative | Sardinia |
Genitive | Sardiniae |
Dative | Sardiniae |
Accusative | Sardiniam |
Ablative | Sardiniā |
Vocative | Sardinia |
Locative | Sardiniae |
Related terms
- Sardī
- Sardus
- Sardōus
- Sardonius
- Sardiniānus
- Sardiniensis
Descendants
References
- Sardinia in Charlton T. Lewis and Charles Short (1879) A Latin Dictionary, Oxford: Clarendon Press
Romanian
This article is issued from Wiktionary. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.