Contionary:eld: Difference between revisions
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
Created page with "==Scots Norse== ===Etymology=== From {{der|snon|non|eldr}}, from {{der|snon|gem-pro|*ailidaz}}. {{cog|snon|is|eldur|fo|eldur|nrn|eld|sv|eld|da|ild}} ====Pronunciation==== ====Noun==== {{head|snon|noun|g=m|genitive '''elds''', plural '''eldar'''}} #fire #{{lb|snon|figurative}} ardor; passion =====Declension===== {{snon-decl-m-a|eld|fc=d}}" |
|||
| Line 3: | Line 3: | ||
From {{der|snon|non|eldr}}, from {{der|snon|gem-pro|*ailidaz}}. {{cog|snon|is|eldur|fo|eldur|nrn|eld|sv|eld|da|ild}} | From {{der|snon|non|eldr}}, from {{der|snon|gem-pro|*ailidaz}}. {{cog|snon|is|eldur|fo|eldur|nrn|eld|sv|eld|da|ild}} | ||
====Pronunciation==== | ====Pronunciation==== | ||
{{IPA link|Standard|Scots Norse}} /ˈjɔd͡ʒ/ | |||
====Noun==== | ====Noun==== | ||
{{head|snon|noun|g=m|genitive '''elds''', plural '''eldar'''}} | {{head|snon|noun|g=m|genitive '''elds''', plural '''eldar'''}} | ||
Revision as of 04:35, 4 April 2026
Scots Norse
Etymology
From Old Norse eldr, from Proto-Germanic *ailidaz. Cognate to Icelandic eldur, Faroese eldur, Norn eld, Swedish eld, Danish ild.
Pronunciation
Noun
eld m (genitive elds, plural eldar)
- fire
- (figurative) ardor; passion
Declension
| indefinite | definite | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| singular | plural | singular | plural | ||
| nominative | eldᶫ | eldar | hìn {{{1l}}}ᶫ | hìnirr eldar | |
| accusative | eld | eldᶫ | hìna {{{1n}}} | hìnirr eldᶫ | |
| dative | eldᶫ | elduᶰ | hìnu {{{1n}}}ᶫ | hìnu {{{1n}}}uᶰ | |
| genitive | eldᶫ | eldᶫ | hin {{{1l}}}ᶫ | hinn {{{1l}}}ᶫ | |
ᶰ: triggers nasal mutation
ᶫ: triggers lenition
Categories:
- Scots Norse terms derived from Old Norse
- Scots Norse terms derived from Proto-Germanic
- Scots Norse terms with Icelandic cognates
- Scots Norse terms with Faroese cognates
- Scots Norse terms with Norn cognates
- Scots Norse terms with Swedish cognates
- Scots Norse terms with Danish cognates
- Scots Norse lemmas
- Scots Norse nouns
- Scots Norse masculine nouns
- Scots Norse masculine a-stem nouns