alksnis

See also: Alksnis

Latvian

Alķšņi

Alternative forms

Etymology

From Proto-Baltic *el(i)sni̯a, *al(i)sni̯a (with an extra epenthetic k between the l and the s), from Proto-Indo-European *elis-, *olis- with a suffix -nyo, from the root *el-, *ol-, *h₂él- “reddish brown color.” Cognates include Lithuanian al̃ksnis, dialectal el̃ksnis, Old Prussian abskande (= [aliskande] < *al(i)skands < *al(i)skans < *al(i)skṇs < *al(i)ksnas), Proto-Slavic *elьxa < *elisā (Russian ольха́ (olʹxá), Belarusian во́льха (vólʹxa), Ukrainian ві́льха (vílʹxa), Bulgarian елха́ (elhá), Belarusian алёс (aljós, alder grove, swampy place)), Proto-Germanic *alisō, *alusō (Gothic 𐌰𐌻𐌹𐍃𐌰 (alisa), Old High German erila < *elira, German Erle), Latin alnus < *al(i)snos.[1]

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): [àlksnis]
(file)

Noun

alksnis m (2nd declension)

  1. alder (species of tree of the genus Alnus, esp. A. glutinosa or A. incana)
    alkšņa mizaalder bark
    alkšņu spurdzesalder catkin
    alkšņu audzealder grove
    cirst alkšņus malkaito chop alders into firewood
    Māriņa beidza šūt savu alkšņu mizās krāsoto kleitu, ko ziemā bija noaudusiMāriņa finished sewing her dress, the color of alder bark, which she had woven (last) winter

Declension

Derived terms

References

  1. Karulis, Konstantīns (1992), alksnis”, in Latviešu Etimoloģijas Vārdnīca (in Latvian), Rīga: AVOTS, →ISBN
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