aust

See also: Aust

Latvian

Etymology 1

From an earlier *aus-ti, from Proto-Baltic *aus-, from Proto-Indo-European *āws-, *aws- (to shine) (< *h₂ews-), from a stem *awes- (*h₂éwes-). Cognates include Lithuanian aũšti (< *austi), Old Church Slavonic за устра (za ustra, early in the morning), Hittite au(š)- (to see, to watch), Sanskrit उच्छति (uccháti, to dawn), उषस् (uṣás), उसृ (usṛ́, dawn, morning), Ancient Greek ἠώς (ēṓs) (< *āusōs), Latin aurōra (< *ausōsā).[1]

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): [àwst]
(file)

Verb

aust

  1. 3rd person singular present indicative form of aust
  2. 3rd person plural present indicative form of aust
  3. (with the particle lai) 3rd person singular imperative form of aust
  4. (with the particle lai) 3rd person plural imperative form of aust

aust intr., 1st conj., only 3rd person, pres. aust, past ausa

  1. (of time period) to dawn (to become light at the beginning of the day)
    rīts ausa lēnithe morning dawned slowly
    lieliskā spožumā aust jaunā dienain great splendor dawns the new day
  2. (of light, light sources) to dawn, to appear slowly (in the sky)
    austrumos ausa gaismathe light dawned in the east
    austošā saulethe dawning sun
    zvaigznes austthe stars are dawning (= appearing)
    tur ausa vēlīns pavasara mēnessthere dawned (= appeared) the belated spring moon
  3. (figuratively) to appear, to begin
    no padomēm mums brīve ausa!from the councils liberty dawned to us!
    acīs meitenēm aust mīlas smaidsa lovely smile dawned in the girls' eyes
  4. (rare, of memories) to come back, to reach awareness
    atmiņā aust bijušās dienasthe past days are dawning in (one's) memory
Conjugation
Derived terms
prefixed verbs:
  • aizaust
  • ataust
  • izaust
  • paaust
  • uzaust
  • ausma, rītausma
  • (poetic) austra
  • austrumi

Etymology 2

From earlier *aus-ti, from Proto-Baltic *aud-, from Proto-Indo-European *h₂ew-dʰ-, from *h₂ew- (to braid, to weave) (earlier “to tie, to bind”), with an extra -dʰ. The present form comes from *aud-yō > *aužuo > aužu. Cognates include Lithuanian áusti, Proto-Slavic *usti (Russian dialectal усло (uslo, a started fabric, canvas), Sanskrit ओतुः (ótuḥ, tissue; web).[1]

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): [âwst]
(file)

Verb

aust tr., 1st conj., pres. aužu, aud, auž, past aužu

  1. to weave (to produce fabric from thread in a loom)
    aust linu audekluto weave linen cloth
    aust kokvilnas audumusto weave cotton fabric
    aužamās stelles(weaving) loom
    fabrikas audējas auž jaunu vilnas kleitu drānuthe factory weaves weave a new dress cloth/fabric
    aust šitās meitas vairs neprata, vērpt negribējathese girls can't weave anymore, and they don't want to spin (either)
  2. to weave (to produce fabric, cloth for a certain object; to produce fabric, cloth with certain patterns)
    aust dvieļus, maisusto weave towels, sacks
    aust linus, vilnuto weave linen (flax), wool
    es aužu linu krekluI am weaving a linen shirt
    tie senos rakstus auž, ko tēvi audušithere they weave the old symbols/patterns that (our) fathers (= ancestors) (used to) weave
  3. to weave (to make a mesh, a net, a web; also of spiders)
    zvejnieks laivā tīklus aužthe fisherman is in (his) boat weaving his net
    zirneklis auž tīkluthe spider is weaving (its) web
Conjugation
Synonyms
Derived terms
prefixed verbs:
  • aizaust
  • apaust
  • ieaust
  • izaust
  • noaust
  • paaust
  • pāraust
  • pieaust
  • saaust
  • uzaust
other derived terms:
  • audējs, audēja
  • audums

References

  1. Karulis, Konstantīns (1992), aust”, in Latviešu Etimoloģijas Vārdnīca (in Latvian), Rīga: AVOTS, →ISBN

Norwegian Bokmål

Etymology

From Old Norse austr.

Noun

aust (indeclinable) (uncountable)

  1. alternative form of øst

Derived terms

Adverb

aust

  1. alternative form of øst

References


Norwegian Nynorsk

Etymology 1

From Old Norse austr, from Proto-Germanic *austrą.

Noun

aust (indeclinable) (uncountable)

  1. east
    Ved soloppgang står sola i aust.
    The Sun is in the east at sunrise.
Derived terms

Etymology 2

From Old Norse austr.

Adverb

aust

  1. east

References

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