йинн
Akkala Sami
The spelling of this entry has been normalized from jinn according to the principles established by Wiktionary's editor community as described at Wiktionary:About Akkala Sami or recent spelling standards of the language.
Etymology
From Proto-Samic *jienë, from Proto-Finno-Ugric *äne. Cognates include Hungarian ének (“song”) and Finnish ääni, compare Northern Sami jietna and Kildin Sami ӣнн (jinn).
Inflection
Inflection of йинн | ||
---|---|---|
Nominative | йинн (jinn) | |
Genitive | [Term?] | |
singular | plural | |
Nominative | йинн (jinn) | [Term?] |
Accusative | [Term?] | [Term?] |
Genitive | [Term?] | [Term?] |
Illative | [Term?] | [Term?] |
Locative | йӣнӹст[1] (jīnïst) | [Term?] |
Comitative | [Term?] | [Term?] |
Abessive | [Term?] | [Term?] |
Essive | [Term?] | |
Partitive | [Term?] |
References
- P. M. Zajkov (1987) “jīni͕-st”, in G. M. Kert, editor, Бабинский диалект саамского языка (фонолого-морфологическое исследование) [Babin dialect of the Sami language], Petrozavodsk: Карельский филиал АН СССР; Институт языка, литературы и истории, page 112
Further reading
- P. M. Zajkov (1987) G. M. Kert, editor, Бабинский диалект саамского языка (фонолого-морфологическое исследование) [Babin dialect of the Sami language], Petrozavodsk: Карельский филиал АН СССР; Институт языка, литературы и истории, page 33
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