patskaņa
See also: patskaņā
Latvian
Etymology
From pats (“self”) + skaņa (“sound”). A calque of (deprecated template usage) [etyl] German Selbstlaut (“vowel”), it was, until the beginning of the 20th century, one of the competing variants of the term patskanis, coined by A. Kronvalds in the 1860s.[1]
Noun
patskaņa m
- (deprecated template usage) genitive singular form of patskanis
patskaņa f (4th declension)
Declension
Declension of patskaņa (4th declension)
singular (vienskaitlis) | plural (daudzskaitlis) | |
---|---|---|
nominative (nominatīvs) | patskaņa | patskaņas |
accusative (akuzatīvs) | patskaņu | patskaņas |
genitive (ģenitīvs) | patskaņas | patskaņu |
dative (datīvs) | patskaņai | patskaņām |
instrumental (instrumentālis) | patskaņu | patskaņām |
locative (lokatīvs) | patskaņā | patskaņās |
vocative (vokatīvs) | patskaņa | patskaņas |
References
- ^ Karulis, Konstantīns (1992) “patskanis”, in Latviešu Etimoloģijas Vārdnīca[1] (in Latvian), Rīga: AVOTS, →ISBN
Categories:
- Latvian etymologies from LEV
- Latvian compound terms
- Latvian terms derived from German
- Latvian non-lemma forms
- Latvian noun forms
- Latvian entries with language name categories using raw markup
- Latvian lemmas
- Latvian nouns
- Latvian feminine nouns
- Latvian obsolete forms
- Latvian fourth declension nouns
- Latvian calques