slims

See also: Slims

English

Verb

slims

  1. Third-person singular simple present indicative form of slim

Noun

slims

  1. plural of slim

Anagrams


Latvian

Etymology

Borrowed from Middle Low German slim or from Middle Dutch slim (twisted, crooked; bad, evil); compare also German schlimm (bad, evil; (col.) sick). First attested in the 17th century, mostly with meanings such as “bad”, “useless”, “inappropriate”, “evil”, or “wild”, or more rarely “sick”. This last meaning “sick” was apparently more frequent in Southern Kurzeme dialects; in Vidzeme, this meaning was not attested still in the 18th century. It became more frequent in written Latvian with the works of G. F. Stenders in the late 18th century, especially his dictionary, in which German krank was translated as slims, and in which slims was no longer translated as “bad,” “useless”. Stenders also coined the terms slimība, slimnieks, apslimt and slimēties (but curiously not slimot, which appeared only in the 19th century).[1]

Pronunciation

Adjective

slims (definite slimais, comparative slimāks, superlative visslimākais, adverb slimi)

  1. sick, ill, diseased (having a disturbance in the normal functioning of the body or one or some of its parts)
    slims bērnssick child
    slima sievetesick woman
    slims kuņģissick stomach
    slimi zobidiseased teeth
    ārstēt slimās acisto treat sick, diseased eyes
    slima ābelesick apple tree
    slims ziedssick flower
    justies slimamto feel sick
    viņš jau vairākas dienas ir slimshe has been sick for several days

Declension

Antonyms

Derived terms

References

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