часъ
Old Church Slavonic
Alternative forms
- (Glagolitic): ⱍⰰⱄⱏ (časŭ)
Etymology
From Proto-Slavic *časъ.
Noun
часъ • (časŭ) m
Old East Slavic
Etymology
From Proto-Slavic *časъ.
Noun
часъ (časŭ) m
Descendants
- Belarusian: час (čas)
- Russian: час (čas), часъ (čas)
- Carpathian Rusyn: час (čas)
- Ukrainian: час (čas)
References
- The template Template:R:orv:Sreznevsky does not use the parameter(s):
page=1479
vol=3 Please see Module:checkparams for help with this warning.Sreznevsky, Izmail I. (1893–1912) “часъ”, in Матеріалы для Словаря древне-русскаго языка по письменнымъ памятникамъ [Materials for the Dictionary of the Old East Slavic Language Based on Written Monuments][1] (in Russian), Saint Petersburg: Department of Russian Language and Literature of the Imperial Academy of Sciences
Russian
Pronunciation
Noun
часъ • (čas) m inan (genitive ча́са or часа́, nominative plural часы́, genitive plural часо́въ)
- Pre-1918 spelling of час (čas).
Declension
Pre-reform declension of часъ (inan masc-form hard-stem accent-c irreg)
Categories:
- Old Church Slavonic terms inherited from Proto-Slavic
- Old Church Slavonic terms derived from Proto-Slavic
- Old Church Slavonic lemmas
- Old Church Slavonic nouns
- Old Church Slavonic masculine nouns
- Old East Slavic terms inherited from Proto-Slavic
- Old East Slavic terms derived from Proto-Slavic
- Old East Slavic lemmas
- Old East Slavic nouns
- Old East Slavic masculine nouns
- Russian 1-syllable words
- Russian terms with IPA pronunciation
- Russian lemmas
- Russian nouns
- Russian masculine nouns
- Russian inanimate nouns
- Russian obsolete forms
- Russian pre-1918 spellings
- Russian hard-stem masculine-form nouns
- Russian hard-stem masculine-form accent-c nouns
- Russian nouns with accent pattern c
- Russian irregular nouns
- Russian nouns with irregular genitive singular
- Russian nouns with partitive singular
- Russian nouns with locative singular