aiz

See also: aiz-

Gothic

Romanization

aiz

  1. Romanization of šŒ°šŒ¹šŒ¶

Latvian

Etymology

From Proto-Baltic *žō (with an extra formative a-: *a-žō > *ažuo > *ažu), from Proto-Indo-European *ĒµŹ°Å (ā€œbehind, under, out of, because ofā€), itself perhaps a pronominal instrumental form from the *gŹ°e, *gŹ°o, a stem found in several particles, like Latvian nedz (ā€œneither, norā€) < *ne-gi. In Latvian, the final vowel was lost, yielding az, still dialectally attested, and also in some place names (Azpurve) and as a prefix in some words in the literary language (azaids (ā€œmealā€), azote (ā€œbosomā€)). Some dialects have a longer, and more recent, form āz. The standard form, aiz, has an unexpected i, possibly the result of convergence between az and iz (ā€œfromā€). Cognates include Lithuanian dialectal až, aÅ¾Ć¹ (ā€œbehind, out of, aboutā€), Proto-Slavic *za (ā€œbehind, out of, about, by, after, because ofā€), Russian Š·Š° (za).[1]

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): [Ć js]
(file)

Preposition

aiz (with genitive)

  1. behind
    paslēpties aiz liela koka ā€• to hide behind a large tree
    aiz stÅ«ra ā€• around (lit. behind) the corner
    atstādams aiz sevis garu putekļu grÄ«sti ā€• leaving behind himself a long trail of dust
    apspriede notika aiz slēgtām durvÄ«m ā€• the discussion took place behind closed doors
  2. behind, under, into (so that it is covered)
    saule aizgrimst aiz mākoņiem ā€• the sun sank behind the clouds
    puisēns aizbaza Ä«kŔķus aiz bikÅ”u lencēm ā€• the boy inserted his thumbs behind, under his suspenders
    aiz Ä«sajiem cimdiem zvejniekiem tek sāļais Å«dens ā€• the salty water was leaking into, under the fishermen's short gloves
  3. on the other side of, across, beyond
    māja ir aiz ezera ā€• the house is on the other side of the lake
    Å”odien pļauj aiz meža ā€• today they are harvesting on the other side of the forest
    Ivanovas darbs pazÄ«stams tālu aiz mÅ«su zemes robežām ā€• Ivanova's work is known far beyond the borders of our country
  4. by (indicates touching, seizing, holding)
    paņemt, vest aiz rokas ā€• to take, to lead (someone) by the hand
    satvert zēnu aiz apkakles ā€• to grab the boy by the collar
    saÄ·ert suņu aiz astes ā€• to grab the dog by the tail
  5. after (indicating a sequence)
    viņi gāja cits aiz cita ā€• they went one after the other
    Lilija nāk; aiz viņas pa pēdām mamma ā€• Lily is coming; after her, mum's footsteps
    aiz' tankiem nāca kājnieki ā€• after the tanks came the infantry
  6. out of, of, because of, for (indicates a reason, a motive, a goal)
    gavilēt aiz prieka ā€• to shout, exult out of joy
    raudāt aiz bēdām ā€• to cry (out) of grief
    viņi smējās aiz cita iemesla ā€• they were laughing for another reason
    aiz dusmām viņŔ nevar parunāt ā€• out of anger he could not speak

Derived terms

References

  1. Karulis, KonstantÄ«ns (1992), ā€œaizā€, in LatvieÅ”u EtimoloÄ£ijas VārdnÄ«ca (in Latvian), RÄ«ga: AVOTS, ā†’ISBN
This article is issued from Wiktionary. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.