دے
Appearance
Brahui
[edit]Etymology
[edit]Derived from Proto-Dravidian *nēram.
Noun
[edit]دے (dē)
Declension
[edit]| singular | plural | |
|---|---|---|
| nominative | دے (de) | دیک (dek) |
| genitive | دیئَنا (deanā) | دیتا (detā) |
| dative | دیئَکِ (deak-i) | دیتیکِ (detek-i) |
| objective | دیۓ (de-ye) | دیتے (dete) |
| instrumental | دیئَٹ (deaṭ) | دیتیئَٹ (deteaṭ) |
| comitative | دیئَتو (deato) | دیتیتو (deteto) |
| ablative | دیئان (deān) | دیتیئان (deteān) |
| locative | دیئَٹی (deaṭī) دیٹی (deṭī) |
دیتیٹی (deteṭī) |
| lative | دیئای (deāī) | دیتیئای (deteāī) |
| adessive | دیئِس (deis) دیئِسْک (deisk) |
دیتیک (detek) |
| terminative | دیئِسْکا (deiskā) | دیتیکا (detekā) |
Monosyllabic noun ending in a long vowel.
Example: با (bā)
Further reading
[edit]- Burrow, T.; Emeneau, M. B. (1984), “3774”, in A Dravidian etymological dictionary, 2nd edition, Oxford University Press, →ISBN.
Punjabi
[edit]Postposition
[edit]دے • (de) (Gurmukhi spelling ਦੇ)
Torwali
[edit]Etymology
[edit]From Sanskrit देवर (devara), from Proto-Indo-European *dayh₂wḗr. Compare Kalasha diór, Konkani देर (der), Pashto لېور (lēwar), Russian деверь (deverʹ), Latin levir.
Noun
[edit]دے (dē) m
- the brother of one's husband; a brother-in-law
Categories:
- Brahui terms derived from Proto-Dravidian
- Brahui lemmas
- Brahui nouns
- Punjabi lemmas
- Punjabi postpositions
- Punjabi postpositions in Shahmukhi script
- Torwali terms inherited from Sanskrit
- Torwali terms derived from Sanskrit
- Torwali terms inherited from Proto-Indo-European
- Torwali terms derived from Proto-Indo-European
- Torwali lemmas
- Torwali nouns
- Torwali masculine nouns
- trw:Male family members