და

See also: -და-

Georgian

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /dɑ/

Etymology 1

From Old Georgian დაჲ (day), from Proto-Kartvelian *da-. Cognate with Mingrelian და (da), Laz და (da) and Svan დაჲ (day), დაჩუირ (dačuir), უდილ (udil). Svan დაჲ (day) might be borrowed from Georgian rather than inherited from Proto-Kartvelian.

Noun

და (da) (plural დები)

  1. sister
    Antonym: ძმა (ʒma)
Inflection
.Georgian.inflection-table tr:hover
{
	background-color:#EBEBEB;
}
Derived terms
  • მოწყალების და (moc̣q̇alebis da)
  • მედიცინის და (medicinis da), მედდა (medda)
Descendants
See also
  • დობილი (dobili)
  • ნახევარდა (naxevarda)
  • დაქალი (dakali)
  • სადაქალო (sadakalo)
  • დისწული (disc̣uli)

Etymology 2

Conjunction

და (da)

  1. and

Laz

Etymology

From Proto-Kartvelian; see Georgian და (da) and Old Georgian დაჲ (day). It has been compared with Old Armenian տալ (tal).

Noun

და (da) (plural დალეფე, Latin spelling da)

  1. sister

References

  • Marr, N. (1910), და”, in Grammatika čanskago (lazskago) jazyka s xrestomatijeju i slovarem [Grammar of the Chan (Laz) Language with a Reader and a Dictionary] (Materialy po jafetičeskomu jazykoznaniju; 2) (in Russian), Saint Petersburg: Imperial Academy of Sciences, page 137a

Mingrelian

Etymology

From Proto-Kartvelian; see Georgian და (da) and Old Georgian დაჲ (day).

Noun

და (da) (plural დალეფი)

  1. sister
    Antonym: ჯიმა (ǯima)

References

  • Kipšidze, I. (1910), და”, in Grammatika mingrelʹskago (iverskago) jazyka s xrestomatijeju i slovarem [Grammar of the Mingrelian (Iverian) Language with a Reader and a Dictionary] (Materialy po jafetičeskomu jazykoznaniju; 7) (in Russian), Saint Petersburg: Imperial Academy of Sciences, page 221a
  • penrixi (Fähnrich), hainc; sarǯvelaʒe, zurab (2000), “და”, in kartvelur enata eṭimologiuri leksiḳoni [Etymological Dictionary of the Kartvelian Languages] (in Georgian), Tbilisi: Tbilisi Sulkhan-Saba Orbeliani State University Press
  • Ačaṙean, Hračʿeay (1979), տալ”, in Hayerēn armatakan baṙaran [Dictionary of Armenian Root Words] (in Armenian), volume IV, 2nd edition, reprint of the original 1926–1935 seven-volume edition, Yerevan: University Press, page 356
This article is issued from Wiktionary. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.