Contionary:bì: Difference between revisions

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*{{IPA+|snon|/ˈbi/|a=ST}}
*{{IPA+|snon|/ˈbi/|a=ST}}
===Etymology===
===Etymology===
{{snon-inh|bíða|bīdaną}} The modern form is under Irish influence. {{doublet|snon|bìodh}}
{{snon-inh|bìda|bíða|bīdaną}} The modern form is under Irish influence. {{doublet|snon|bìodh}}
===Verb===
===Verb===
{{snon-verb|pres=bi'ir|past=bì'adhir|fut=bì'ist|cond=bì'adhist}}
{{snon-verb|pres=bithir|past=bìthadhir|fut=bìthist|cond=bìthadhist}}
#{{lb|snon|non-copulative}} (there) to be
#{{lb|snon|non-copulative}} (there) to be
#:{{uxi|snon|bì'ir Gud|God is; There is a God}}
#:{{uxi|snon|bìthir Gud|God is; There is a God}}
====Usage notes====
====Usage notes====
This is one of very few verbs that takes {{l|snon|i-}} for negation, appearing as ''imì'' (/ə.ˈmi/)
This is one of very few verbs that takes {{l|snon|i-}} for negation, appearing as ''imì'' (/ə.ˈmi/)
====Conjugation====
====Conjugation====
{{snon-conj-i|ev='}}
{{snon-conj-i|ev=th}}


===Mutation===
===Mutation===
{{snon-mut}}
{{snon-mut}}

Revision as of 14:40, 19 May 2026

Anrish

Alternative forms

Etymology

From Middle Anrish bin, from Old Anrish bin, bien, from Proto-Germanic *bi and *in

Pronunciation

(Anrish) IPA: /bi/

Preposition

(runic:‧ᛒᛁᛌ‧)

bætíe. (A cat in a sink.)
  • (+ common)
  1. into (allative)
    Gnúð lau brókar mír.
    ᛬ᛝᚢᚴ‧ᛚᛆᚢ‧ᛒᛁᛌ‧ᛒᚱᚮᚳᚭᚱ‧ᛘᛁᚱ᛬
    Water got into my boots
  2. indicating an order or arrangement
    Aunt ǽrr hereð tíl!
    ‧᛬ᛆᚢᚾᛏ‧ᛆᚱᚱ‧ᚼᛖᚱᛖᚴ‧ᛒᛁᛌ‧ᛏᛁᛚ᛬‧
    Form a line!
  • (+ dative)
  1. expressing containment, inside, within
    Is lúa bætíne.
    ᛬ᛁᛞ‧ᛚᚢᚭ‧ᛒᛁᛌ‧ᛒᛆᛏᛁᛌᚾᛖ᛬
    The cat is in the sink
  2. denoting a state of the subject
    Is y Comene.
    ᛬ᛁᛞ‧ᛦ‧ᛒᛁᛌ‧ᚳᚮᛘᛁᚾᛖ᛬
    He is in a coma.
  3. indicates means, medium, format, genre, or instrumentality, (of a text, speech etc.) a language, script, tone etc.
    Aunt tilteð rúá!
    ‧᛬ᛆᚢᚾᛏ‧ᛏᛁᛚᚴᛖᚴ‧ᛒᛁᛌ‧ᚱᚢᚭᛌ᛬‧
    Write in runes!
  • (+ genitive)
  1. indicates, connotatively, a place-like form of someone's (or something's) personality, as their psychic and physical characteristics
    Is nǽð ír bin-ǫra.
    ᛬ᛁᛞ‧ᚾᛆᚴ‧ᛆᚱᚭᛘᛖ‧ᛒᛁᛌᛆᚭᚱᚭ᛬
    You have a friend in me.


Scots Norse

Pronunciation

Etymology

From Sudrey Norse bìda, from Old Norse bíða, from Proto-Germanic *bīdaną. The modern form is under Irish influence. Doublet of bìodh

Verb

(present bithir, past bìthadhir, future bìthist, conditional bìthadhist)

  1. (non-copulative) (there) to be
    bìthir GudGod is; There is a God

Usage notes

This is one of very few verbs that takes i- for negation, appearing as imì (/ə.ˈmi/)

Conjugation

Mutation

Mutated forms of bì
radical lenition eclipsis
bhì

Note: Certain mutated forms of some words can never occur in standard Scots Norse.
All possible mutated forms are displayed for convenience.