kurpe

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See also: kurpē, kurpė, and kürpe

Latvian

 kurpes on Latvian Wikipedia
Kurpes

Etymology

From (deprecated template usage) [etyl] Proto-Baltic *kurp- (+ feminine ending -e), from the zero grade *kr̥p- of (deprecated template usage) [etyl] Proto-Indo-European *kerp- (piece of leather; shoe), from the stem *ker- (to cut) (whence also cirpt (to shear, to clip), q.v.) with an extra p. Semantic evolution: “to cut” > “a cut piece of leather” > “shoe (made of leather)” > “shoe.” Cognates include Lithuanian kùrpė (shoe, half-boot, slipper; foot (measure of length)), Old Prussian kurpe (shoe), (deprecated template usage) [etyl] Russian dialectal корпа́ть (korpátʹ, to mend clothes), Bulgarian кърпа (kǎrpa, rag, cloth, patch), Serbo-Croatian kȑpa (patch, piece of cloth), kȑplje (old shoes, skis), Old Irish cairem (cobbler) (< *carpjamos), Ancient Greek καρβάτινος (karbátinos, made of leather), καρβάτιναι (karbátinai, rawhide shoes), καρπάτινον (karpátinon, simple shoe made of one piece of leather).[1]

Pronunciation

Audio:(file)

Noun

kurpe f (5th declension)

  1. (usually in the plural) shoes (footwear made of strong, rigid material (e.g., leather) with heels and hard soles, covering the foot but not higher than the ankle)
    vīriešu vasaras kurpesmen's summer shoes
    sieviešu ielas kurpeswomen's street shoes
    augstpapēžu kurpeshigh-heeled shoes
    rīta kurpesslippers (lit. morning shoes)
    kurpes ar sprādzishoes with a buckle
    'kurpju auklasshoe laces
    spodrināt kurpesto polish shoes
    novilkt kurpesto take off (one's) shoes
    baleta kurpesballet shoes
    Kumuru ciema kurpniekam Mednītim nācās taisīt vairākus pārus kurpjuMednītis, the shoemaker of the village of Kumuru, had to make several pairs of shoes
  2. (technology) a component part which supports something else
    balsta iekšējā kurpesupporting internal shoe

Usage notes

Level intonation is the standard intonation for the term kurpe (shoe) according to Latviešu etimoloģijas vārdnīca, pronunciation with a broken intonation is very common, however.

Declension

Derived terms

See also

References

  1. ^ Karulis, Konstantīns (1992) “kurpe”, in Latviešu Etimoloģijas Vārdnīca (in Latvian), Rīga: AVOTS, →ISBN