пиꙁда
Old Novgorodian
Etymology
PIE word |
---|
*písdeh₂ |
Inherited from Proto-Slavic *pīzdà (“vulva”). Cognate with Old East Slavic пизда (pizda), Belarusian пізда́ (pizdá), Russian пизда́ (pizdá), Ukrainian пизда́ (pyzdá).
Noun
пиꙁда (pizda) f
Declension
Declension of пиꙁда (hard a-stem)
singular | dual | plural | |
---|---|---|---|
nominative | пиꙁда pizda |
пиꙁдѣ pizdě |
пиꙁдꙑ pizdy |
genitive | пиꙁдꙑ pizdy |
пиꙁдоу pizdu |
пиꙁдъ pizdŭ |
dative | пиꙁдѣ pizdě |
пиꙁдама pizdama |
пиꙁдамъ pizdamŭ |
accusative | пиꙁдѫ pizdǫ |
пиꙁдѣ pizdě |
пиꙁдꙑ pizdy |
instrumental | пиꙁдоѭ pizdojǫ |
пиꙁдама pizdama |
пиꙁдами pizdami |
locative | пиꙁдѣ pizdě |
пиꙁдоу pizdu |
пиꙁдахъ pizdaxŭ |
vocative | пиꙁдо pizdo |
пиꙁдѣ pizdě |
пиꙁдꙑ pizdy |
Related terms
Old Novgorodian terms derived from the Proto-Indo-European root *sed- (0 c, 1 e)
References
- “пиꙁда (letter no. 955), c. 1140‒1160”, in Древнерусские берестяные грамоты [Birchbark Literacy from Medieval Rus] (in Russian), http://gramoty.ru, 2007–2024
Further reading
- Yanin, V. L., Zaliznyak, A. A., Gippius, A. A., editors (2015), “Грамота № 955”, in Новгородские грамоты на бересте (2001–2014 гг.) [Novgorod letters on birchbark: 2001–2014] (in Russian), volume 12, Moscow: LRC Publishing House, →ISBN, page 55
- Zaliznyak, A. A., Yanin, V. L. (2006) “Берестяные грамоты из новгородских раскопок 2005 г.”, in Вопросы языкознания [Topics in the Study of Language] (in Russian), number 3, archive, Moscow: Nauka, →ISSN, pages 3–13
- “пизда”, in Берестяные грамоты – Национальный корпус русского языка [Birchbark Letters – Russian National Corpus], https://ruscorpora.ru/, 2003–2024
This article is issued from Wiktionary. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.