beļģis
Latvian
Etymology
Borrowed from Latin Belgae (“Belgians”), the name of a group of Gallo-Germanic tribes living in the area of present-day Belgium, apparently from (deprecated template usage) [etyl] Proto-Celtic *bolg-, *belg- (“to swell (with anger, battle fury)”), i.e., originally this tribal name would have meant “the people who swell with anger or battle fury.”
Noun
beļģis m (2nd declension, feminine form: beļģiete)
- (male) Belgian (i.e., a man born in Belgium)
- ierazdamies izstādē uz visu dienu, beļģi, sevišķi mazturīgākie, ņem ldīzi arī ēdienu ― having come to the exhibition for the whole day, the Belgians, especially the less well-off, take (their own) food along
- (genitive plural) Belgian; pertaining to Belgium and its people
- beļģu māksla ― Belgian art
- beļģu franki ― Belgian francs (old currency)
Usage notes
The two synonyms beļģis and beļģietis, when referring to an individual from Belgium, appear to be fully interchangeable. In the plural, beļģi is much more frequently used than beļģieši.
Declension
Declension of beļģis (2nd declension)
Synonyms
Related terms
Categories:
- Latvian terms borrowed from Latin
- Latvian terms derived from Latin
- Latvian terms derived from Proto-Celtic
- Latvian lemmas
- Latvian nouns
- Latvian masculine nouns
- Latvian terms with usage examples
- Latvian second declension nouns
- Latvian non-alternating second declension nouns
- lv:Belgium
- lv:Demonyms
- lv:Nationalities