See also: Appendix:Variations of "as"

Lithuanian

Alternative forms

Etymology

From Old Lithuanian , from Proto-Balto-Slavic *eˀź-um, *eś; compare Latvian es, Old Prussian es/as, Sudovian es, Proto-Slavic *(j)azъ. From Proto-Indo-European h₁eǵ-, *h₁eǵHom (I). Compare Sanskrit अहम् (aham), Ancient Greek ἐγώ (egṓ), Old Armenian ես (es), Latin egō. The final *-ś in Baltic is perhaps a result of sandhi or final obstruent devoicing.

Notable parallels of the vowel change observed in Lithuanian > include:

These forms were perhaps carried on from dialects where *e- regularly gives a-.[1]

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /ɐʂ/

Pronoun

àš

  1. (first-person singular) I

Declension

Derived terms

See mano;

  • mandings
  • aiman

See also

References

  1. Rick Derksen (2002) '"Rozwadowski's change" in Baltic', Baltų Filologija, vol. 11, no. 1, pg. 5-12
  2. Vytautas Ambrazas ed. (1997) Lithuanian Grammar. Vilnius: Insitute of the Lithuanian Language, page 208
  3. Vytautas Mažiulis (2006) Historical Grammar of Old Prussian, page 78

Serbo-Croatian

Conjunction

  1. (Chakavian) because

Synonyms

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