бугор
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
Russian[edit]
Etymology[edit]
Inherited from Proto-Slavic *bugrъ. Ultimately from Proto-Indo-European *bʰewgʰ- (“to bend”). Cognates include Ukrainian бугі́р (buhír), Lithuanian baũgurs.
Non-Slavic cognates include Sanskrit भुग्न (bhugna, “curved, crooked”), Latin fugio (“I flee, I hasten”), English bow
Pronunciation[edit]
Noun[edit]
буго́р • (bugór) m inan or m anim (genitive бугра́, nominative plural бугры́, genitive plural бугро́в, diminutive бугоро́к)
- (inanimate) hill, hillock, knoll
- (inanimate) bump (protuberance)
- (animate, colloquial) big cheese, boss
Declension[edit]
Declension of буго́р (bian masc-form hard-stem accent-b reduc)
Derived terms[edit]
- бугри́стый (bugrístyj), буго́рчатый (bugórčatyj)
- бугри́ться (bugrítʹsja)
- за бугро́м (za bugróm), за буго́р (za bugór)
Descendants[edit]
- → Ingrian: bykrä
Categories:
- Russian terms inherited from Proto-Slavic
- Russian terms derived from Proto-Slavic
- Russian terms derived from Proto-Indo-European
- Russian 2-syllable words
- Russian terms with IPA pronunciation
- Russian terms with audio links
- Russian lemmas
- Russian nouns
- Russian masculine nouns
- Russian inanimate nouns
- Russian animate nouns
- Russian nouns with multiple animacies
- Russian colloquialisms
- Russian hard-stem masculine-form nouns
- Russian hard-stem masculine-form accent-b nouns
- Russian nouns with accent pattern b
- Russian nouns with reducible stem
- ru:Landforms
- ru:Leaders