strēle
Latvian
Alternative forms
- (dialectal form) strēla
Etymology
From Proto-Indo-European *strel-, *strēl-, from *ster- (“line, streak, stripe; jet, spurt; beam”) (whence also Latvian stars (“ray, beam”), q.v.) with an extra l. The same stem also yielded the 17th-/18th-century verb strēlēt (“to shoot”), later replaced by šaut (“to shoot”). The basic meaning must have been “to scatter, to throw (around)”, from which “to shoot” and, as a nominalized form, “that which is shot.” Cognates include Lithuanian strėlė̃, strėlà (“arrow; shoot, branch; rafter”), Old Church Slavonic стрѣла (strěla), Belarusian, Bulgarian, Russian стрела (strelá), Ukrainian стріла (strilá, “arrow”), Czech střela (“arrow, projectile”), Polish strzała (“arrow”), Old High German strāla (“arrow, lightning bolt”), German Strahl (“ray, beam”).[1]
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): [stɾɛ̂ːlɛ]
Noun
strēle f (5th declension)
- (chiefly figuratively) arrow, dart (projectile thrown with a bow)
- traucas kā izšauta strēle ― speeding, rushing like an arrow (lit. like a shot arrow)
- arrow (a component part that is thin and long, usually used for pointing)
- pa skalu slīd strēle, norādīdama iegrimes dziļumu ― along the scale the arrow moved, showing the depth of the sinking
- kad Lilija pēdējo reizi paraudzījās pulkstenī, zeltītās strēles iezīmēja ceturksni uz deviņiem ― when Lilija last looked at the clock, the golden arrows showed a quarter of nine
- something narrow and elongated like an arrow
- ledus gan plaisāja sīkās strēlēs, tomēr izturēja ― the ice did crack in tiny arrows, but it held, endured
- (of light) beam, ray
- putekļi vērpās saules strēlēs, kas staroja iekšā pa logu ― the dust was spinning under (lit. in) the sun rays which shone in through the window
- kā ugunīga pātaga tumsu pārcirta zibens strēle — like a fiery whip, the lightning bolt (lit. arrow, ray) cut thourgh the dakrness
- (of gas, fog, smoke) narrow, elongated formation, strip
- pāri debesīm traucās melnas mākoņu strēles, brīžiem aizsegdamas mēnesi ― across the sky rushed black cloud strips, sometimes hiding the moon
- zilganas dūmu strēles peldēja pāri ievu krūmiem ― bluish smoke strips floated across the cherry bushes
- (of land, territory) strip, stretch (narrow, elongated area)
- zemes, smilšu strēle ― a strip of land, of sand
- tāda bija jūrmala šai ciemā: šaura krasta strēle ― such was the seaside at (= near) this village: a narrow stretch of coast
- (technology) jib, boom (the projecting arm of a crane)
- līgani pagriezās celtņa strēle ― smoothly turned the crane jib, boom
Usage notes
The preferred term for "arrow" as a weapon is bulta, while strēle is more frequently used metaphorically, or when talking about pointing signs or component parts.
Declension
singular (vienskaitlis) | plural (daudzskaitlis) | |
---|---|---|
nominative (nominatīvs) | strēle | strēles |
accusative (akuzatīvs) | strēli | strēles |
genitive (ģenitīvs) | strēles | strēļu |
dative (datīvs) | strēlei | strēlēm |
instrumental (instrumentālis) | strēli | strēlēm |
locative (lokatīvs) | strēlē | strēlēs |
vocative (vokatīvs) | strēle | strēles |
Derived terms
- strēlnieks, strēlniece
- (archaic term) strēlēt
References
- Karulis, Konstantīns (1992), “strēle”, in Latviešu Etimoloģijas Vārdnīca (in Latvian), Rīga: AVOTS, →ISBN