-ler
German
Etymology
From rebracketing of stems ending in -l and the suffix -er, in words like Sattler, Ziegler, and in derivations from diminutive verbs in -eln.
Pronunciation
Audio (file)
Suffix
-ler m (strong, genitive -lers, plural -ler)
- Used to create nouns linking a person (or thing) to some group, activity, object; similar to -er, but usually attached to nouns, not verbs.
Declension
Derived terms
German terms suffixed with -ler
- Erstklässler, Zweitklässler, Drittklässler
- AfDler, CDUler, PDSler, SPDler
- Korbblütler, Lippenblütler, Schmetterlingsblütler
- Nachzügler, Umzügler, Zuzügler
Greenlandic
Suffix
-ler (n-v?, truncative?)
Usage notes
Sometimes fusioning. When used intransitively, may have a reflexive meaning.
Derived terms
Greenlandic terms suffixed with -ler
Suffix
-ler (v-v?, truncative?)
- has begun to [verb], is about to [verb], is in the process of [verb]ing
Further reading
- Bjørnum, S.: Grønlandsk Grammatik, p. 241. Atuagkat 2003.
References
- -ler in Katersat
- Bjørnum, S.: Grønlandsk Grammatik, p. 240. Atuagkat 2003.
Turkish
Etymology
From Ottoman Turkish ـلر, ultimately from Common Turkic *-ler, a plural suffix which is absent from Proto-Turkic. Found as Old Turkic [script needed] (-lar) (back variant) but not found in the sister Oghur branch (compare Chuvash -сем (-sem), Bulgar -ڛَم), where it descended from *sāyïn (“every”). The Chuvash plural suffix, however, lacks vowel harmony unlike other suffixes.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /lɛɾ/
Derived terms
Turkish terms suffixed with -ler
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