dystur
Faroese
Etymology
Borrowed from Danish dyst, from Middle Low German dust, from Old French jouste, from juster, from Vulgar Latin *iuxtāre, from Latin iuxtā (“close to”).
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): [ˈtɪstʊɹ]
Noun
dystur m (genitive singular dysts, plural dystir)
Declension
m15 | Singular | Plural | ||
Indefinite | Definite | Indefinite | Definite | |
Nominative | dystur | dysturin | dystir | dystirnir |
Accusative | dyst | dystin | dystir | dystirnar |
Dative | dysti | dystinum | dystum | dystunum |
Genitive | dysts | dystsins | dysta | dystanna |
Derived terms
- fótbóltsdystur (“football (soccer) match”)
- handbóltsdystur (“handball match”)
- heimadystur (“home game”)
- landsdystur (“international match”)
- steypadystur (“cup-tie”)
- umdystur (“overtime”)
- venjingardystur (“training match”)
- vinadystur (“friendly game”)
- útidystur (“away game”)
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