akmens
Latvian
.jpg.webp)
Etymology
From Proto-Balto-Slavic *akmō, from Proto-Indo-European *h₂éḱ-mō, *h₂éḱ-h₂-men (whence also asmens, originally a parallel form to akmens, created by a different development of *ḱ, perhaps due to Proto-Indo-European dialectal differences), from the stem *aḱ-, *h₂éḱ- (“sharp, pointy, angular; stone”) with an extra element -men. Cognates include Lithuanian akmuõ, genitive akmeñs, Sudovian akmi, Hittite aku (“sharp stone”), Sanskrit अश्मन् (aśman, “stone, rock, sky”), Avestan asman (asman, “stone, sky”), Ancient Greek ἄκμων (ákmōn, “anvil”), ἀκμή (akmḗ, “spike, edge, blade”); with reduction (zero grade) of the stem (*h₂éḱ-h₂-men > Proto-Slavic *kamen ~ *kamy “stone”), also Belarusian, Russian камень (kamenʹ), Ukrainian камінь (kámin'), Bulgarian камен (kámen), Czech kámen, Polish kamień.[1]
According to more recent analyses, the corresponding form may have been *akmō all the way up to Eastern Baltic unity, thus identical to the Proto-Balto-Slavic form.
Pronunciation
(file) |
Noun
akmens m (2nd declension, irregular nominative, genitive)
- stone, rock (non-metallic solid mineral; a piece of such mineral)
- ass, šķautņaina akmens ― sharp, angular stone
- akmens šķembas ― crushed stone
- akmens slabs, plāksne ― stone pillar, plate
- akmens klons, sienas, bruģis ― stone floor, walls, pavement
- mest akmeni ― to throw a stone
- lauzt akmeņus ― to break stones, rocks
- smags ka akmens ― heavy as a rock
- ciets ka akmens ― hard as a rock
- krīt ka akmens ― to fall like a rock
- akmens laikmets ― the stone age (in prehistory)
- (in the genitive, used as adjective) hard; indifferent, unfeeling, unrelenting, unshakable
- akmens sirds ― heart of stone
- gleznotājs ar nekustīgu akmens seju bija atlaidies atzveltnes krēslā ― the painter with the immobile, stone face had let himself down on the armchair
- precious stone, also an imitation of a precious stone
- rets akmens ― rare (gem)stone
- īsti akmeņi ― real, genuine (gem)stone
- gredzens ar akmeni ― ring with a (precious) stone
- pulkstenis ar piecpadsmit akmeņiem ― a clock with fifteen gems
- (medicine, anatomy) stone, calculus (a hard, usually saline, formation in the body)
- žults akmeņi ― gall stones
- zobu akmens, zobakmens ― tartar (lit. teeth stone)
- nieru akmeņi veidojas nieru bļodiņās ― kidney stones are formed in the renal pelvis
- residue left in certain objects
- katla akmens ― boiler stone (= mineral deposits on boiler walls resulting from boiling water)
Declension
singular (vienskaitlis) | plural (daudzskaitlis) | |
---|---|---|
nominative (nominatīvs) | akmens | akmeņi |
accusative (akuzatīvs) | akmeni | akmeņus |
genitive (ģenitīvs) | akmens | akmeņu |
dative (datīvs) | akmenim | akmeņiem |
instrumental (instrumentālis) | akmeni | akmeņiem |
locative (lokatīvs) | akmenī | akmeņos |
vocative (vokatīvs) | akmeni | akmeņi |
Synonyms
- (of "earthen material"): ieži
- (of "rock", "boulder"): klints, laukakmens
- (of "precious stone"): dārgakmens
Derived terms
References
- Karulis, Konstantīns (1992), “akmens”, in Latviešu Etimoloģijas Vārdnīca (in Latvian), Rīga: AVOTS, →ISBN