ланцуг

Belarusian

Etymology

Borrowed from Polish łańcuch, from an unattested compound of Middle High German lanne (chain) and Middle High German zug (tug, pull), the former being from Old High German lanna (metal sheet, platelet; chain), from Vulgar Latin lanna from Latin lāmina (sheet especially of metal), the latter from the well-known Proto-Germanic *tugiz (tug, pull). Ukrainian ланцю́г (lancjúh), Russian ланцу́г (lancúg) and Romanian lanț are from the same source.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): [ɫanˈt͡sux]
  • (file)

Noun

ланцу́г • (lancúh) m inan (genitive ланцуга́, nominative plural ланцугі́, genitive plural ланцуго́ў)

  1. chain

Declension

Russian

Etymology

Borrowed from Polish łańcuch, from an unattested compound of Middle High German lanne (chain) and Middle High German zug (tug, pull), the former being from Old High German lanna (metal sheet, platelet; chain), from Vulgar Latin lanna from Latin lāmina (sheet especially of metal), the latter from the well-known Proto-Germanic *tugiz (tug, pull). Ukrainian ланцю́г (lancjúh) and Belarusian ланцу́г (lancúh) are from the same source.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): [ɫɐnˈt͡suk]

Noun

ланцу́г • (lancúg) m inan (genitive ланцуга́, nominative plural ланцуги́, genitive plural ланцуго́в)

  1. (dialectal) chain
    Synonym: цепь (cepʹ)

Declension

References

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