-eder
Norwegian Bokmål
Etymology
From Ancient Greek ἕδρα (hédra, “face of a geometrical solid”).
Norwegian Nynorsk
Etymology
From Ancient Greek ἕδρα (hédra, “face of a geometrical solid”).
Romani
Suffix
-eder
- -er, more; forms comparative adjectives and adverbs.[1][2][3]
- baro (“big”) + -eder → bareder (“bigger”)
References
- Boretzky, Norbert, Igla, Birgit (1994) “-edér”, in Wörterbuch Romani-Deutsch-Englisch für den südosteuropäischen Raum : mit einer Grammatik der Dialektvarianten [Romani-German-English dictionary for the Southern European region] (in German), Wiesbaden: Harrassowitz Verlag, →ISBN, page 88a
- Marcel Courthiade (2009) “Morfológiai függelék [Morphological survey]”, in Melinda Rézműves, editor, Morri angluni rromane ćhibǎqi evroputni lavustik = Első rromani nyelvű európai szótáram : cigány, magyar, angol, francia, spanyol, német, ukrán, román, horvát, szlovák, görög [My First European-Romani Dictionary: Romani, Hungarian, English, French, Spanish, German, Ukrainian, Romanian, Croatian, Slovak, Greek] (overall work in Hungarian and English), Budapest: Fővárosi Onkormányzat Cigány Ház--Romano Kher, →ISBN, page 479
- Yūsuke Sumi (2018) ニューエクスプレスプラス ロマ(ジプシー)語 [New Express Plus Romani (Gypsy)] (in Japanese), Tokyo: Hakusuisha, published 2021, →ISBN, →OCLC, pages 96-97
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