њоԓ
Eastern Khanty
Alternative forms
- нял (njal) — Vakh-Vasyugan
- њоԯ (njoł)
Etymology
From Proto-Khanty *ńāl, from Proto-Uralic *ńële. Cognates include Northern Khanty њоԓ (njoł), Northern Mansi ня̄л (nâ̄l), Hungarian nyíl and Finnish nuoli.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): [nʲɒːɬ]
References
- Elena Skribnik, editor (2016), Ob-Ugric Database: analysed text corpora and dictionaries for less described Ob-Ugric dialects, University of Munich
- Volkova, A. N., Solovar, V. N. (2016) “њоԓ”, in Краткий русско-хантыйский словарь (сургутский диалект) [Short Russian-Khanty Dictionary (Surgut dialect)] (in Russian), Khanty-Mansiysk: Югорский формат, →ISBN, page 83
- Volkova, A. N., Solovar, V. N. (2018) “њоԓ”, in Хантыйско-русский тематический словарь (сургутский диалект) [Khanty-Russian Thematic Dictionary (Surgut dialect)] (in Russian), Saint Petersburg: РГПУ имени А.И. Герцена, →ISBN, page 70
- Glushak, V. M. (2006) Хантыйско-русский словарь (сургутский диалект) [Khanty-Russian Dictionary (Surgut dialect)] (in Russian), Surgut: СурГУ, page 70
Northern Khanty
Alternative forms
- њоԯ (njoł)
Etymology
From Proto-Khanty *ńāl, from Proto-Uralic *ńële. Cognates include Northern Mansi ня̄л (nâ̄l), Hungarian nyíl and Finnish nuoli.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): [nʲɔːɬ]
References
- Solovar, V. N. (2014) “њоԓ”, in Хантыйско-русский Словарь (казымский диалект) [Khanty-Russian Dictionary (Kazym Dialect)], Khanty-Mansiysk: ООО «ФОРМАТ», →ISBN, page 223
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