idi

See also: idì and İdi

Basque

Etymology

From Proto-Basque *it-.

Pronunciation

  • (file)

Noun

idi

  1. ox

Declension

  • idiaketz
  • idi-begi
  • idi-bihotz
  • idigai
  • idiketa
  • idiki
  • idi-proba
  • idisko
  • idiskotu

Hausa

Etymology

Borrowed from Arabic عِيد (ʿīd).

Noun

īdī̀ m (possessed form īdìn)

  1. any Muslim holiday

Italian

Noun

idi m pl

  1. Ides

Maia

Noun

idi

  1. banana

Turkish

Alternative forms

  • (forms with /y/ come after nouns ending with a vowel.)
  • -di, -ti, -ydi
  • -dı, -tı, -ydı
  • -du, -tu, -ydu
  • -dü, -tü, -ydü

Etymology

From Ottoman Turkish ایدی (idi, was), from Proto-Turkic er-ti (was), third person past participle of Proto-Turkic *er- (to be). Equivalent to i- (to be) + -di (past tense suffix). Cognate with Old Turkic 𐰼𐱅𐰃 (erti, was), Karakhanid [script needed] (erdi, was), Kazakh еді (edi, was), Uzbek edi (was).

Verb

idi

  1. third-person singular past of imek, was
    Yakışıklı bir çocuk idi.He was a handsome guy.
    Génçti.He was young.
    (
    kı́z.She was a girl
    ) as opposed to (
    kızdı́.He/she got angry.
    ) (see usage notes for stress marking)
    (
    bítti.It was a louse
    ) as opposed to (
    bittı́.It ended.
    ) (see usage notes for stress marking)

Usage notes

  • Mostly embedded into words taking the shape in alternative forms. When it is in the form of -di/-ti, -dı/-tı, -du/-tu, and -dü/-tü which are also past tense suffixes, a differentiation in stress is noted where the past tense suffixes carry the stress but the alternative forms of idi do not, mainly because they are not originally suffixes. Past tense suffixes always follow a verb.
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