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1 Ukrainian
Ukrainian [ju:'kreɪnjən]1 noun(b) (language) ukrainien mukrainien►► the Ukrainian Soviet Socialist Republic la République soviétique d'Ukraine -
2 украинский язык
Большой англо-русский и русско-английский словарь > украинский язык
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3 украинский язык
Русско-английский словарь по общей лексике > украинский язык
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4 украински
Ukrainian* * *украѝнски,прил., -а, -о, -и Ukrainian; \украинскии език (the) Ukrainian (language).* * *Ukrainian* * *1. Ukrainian 2. УКРАИНСКИ език (the) Ukrainian (language) -
5 украинский
Ukrainianукраинский язык — Ukrainian, the Ukrainian language
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6 украинский
украи́нский язы́к — Ukrainian, the Ukrainian language
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7 українська мова
Ukrainian, the Ukrainian language -
8 ukraincha
Ukrainian; the Ukrainian language -
9 украинский язык
Ukrainian, the Ukrainian language -
10 украинец
Большой англо-русский и русско-английский словарь > украинец
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11 Ukrainische
Uk|ra|i|nisch(e)nt (LING)UkrainianSee:→ auch Deutsch(e)* * *Ukra·i·ni·sche<-n>nt▪ das \Ukrainische Ukrainian, the Ukrainian language -
12 украинец
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13 украинка
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14 Ukrainische
Ukra·i·ni·sche <-n> nt -
15 на украинском языке
in the Ukrainian language; in UkrainianДополнительный универсальный русско-английский словарь > на украинском языке
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16 ucraniano
adj.Ukrainian, pertaining to Ukraine or its people.m.1 Ukrainian, native or inhabitant of Ukraine.2 Ukrainian, Ukrainian language, Slavic language spoken in Ukraine.* * *► adjetivo1 Ukranian► nombre masculino,nombre femenino1 (persona) Ukranian* * *= Ukrainian.Ex. A characteristic feature of the Ukrainian market is the high popularity of low-alcohol drinks, namely beer and wine.* * *= Ukrainian.Ex: A characteristic feature of the Ukrainian market is the high popularity of low-alcohol drinks, namely beer and wine.
* * *adj/m,fUkrainian* * *
ucraniano,-a adjetivo & sustantivo masculino y femenino Ukrainian
' ucraniano' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
ucraniana
English:
Ukrainian
* * *ucraniano, -a♦ adjUkrainian♦ nm,fUkrainian* * *I adj UkrainianII m, ucrania f Ukrainian* * *ucraniano, -na adj & n: Ukranian -
17 idioma
m.language.* * *1 language* * *noun m.* * *SM language* * *masculino language* * *= language.Nota: Sistema de símbolos para la comunicación que consta normalmente de vocabulario y reglas.Ex. A paraphrase is an interpretation of the concepts featured in a document, written in the language of the writer of the paraphrase.----* idioma de intercambio = exchange language.* idioma nacional = national language.* laboratorio de idiomas = language lab, language laboratory.* programa para el aprendizaje de idiomas = language-learning sofware.* software para el aprendizaje de idiomas = language-learning sofware.* * *masculino language* * *= language.Nota: Sistema de símbolos para la comunicación que consta normalmente de vocabulario y reglas.Ex: A paraphrase is an interpretation of the concepts featured in a document, written in the language of the writer of the paraphrase.
* idioma de intercambio = exchange language.* idioma nacional = national language.* laboratorio de idiomas = language lab, language laboratory.* programa para el aprendizaje de idiomas = language-learning sofware.* software para el aprendizaje de idiomas = language-learning sofware.* * *languagehabla varios idiomas she speaks several languagesestá claro que no hablamos el mismo idioma we obviously don't speak the same language o aren't on the same wavelengthCompuestos:modern languageworld language, universal language* * *
idioma sustantivo masculino
language
idioma sustantivo masculino language
' idioma' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
alemán
- alemana
- árabe
- castellana
- castellano
- catalán
- catalana
- celta
- checa
- checo
- chino
- danés
- danesa
- dominar
- eslava
- eslavo
- eslovena
- esloveno
- español
- española
- euskera
- eusquera
- finlandés
- finlandesa
- flamenca
- flamenco
- francés
- francesa
- gaélica
- gaélico
- galés
- galesa
- gallega
- gallego
- habla
- holandés
- holandesa
- húngara
- húngaro
- inglés
- inglesa
- irlandés
- irlandesa
- kurda
- kurdo
- lastre
- macedonia
- macedonio
- neerlandés
- neerlandesa
English:
Arabic
- Basque
- broken
- Bulgarian
- Castilian
- Catalan
- Celtic
- command
- Czech
- Danish
- Dutch
- English
- ESL
- Estonian
- Finnish
- French
- Gaelic
- Galician
- German
- Greek
- Hebrew
- Irish
- Italian
- know
- language
- Latin
- lingo
- Lithuanian
- mastery
- native
- Norwegian
- polish
- Polynesian
- Portuguese
- Rumanian
- Russian
- Serbo-Croat
- Slovene
- Spanglish
- Spanish
- speak
- speaker
- Swedish
- TEFL
- Tibetan
- tongue
- Ukrainian
- Welsh
- second
* * *idioma nmlanguage* * *m language* * *idioma nm: languageel idioma inglés: the English language* * *idioma n language -
18 evьja
evьja; evьn̨a Grammatical information: f. iā; f. jā Proto-Slavic meaning: `granary, drying shed'Page in Trubačev: -Russian:évnja (W. dial.) `granary, drying shed' [f jā];ëvnja (Psk.) `granary, drying shed' [f jā];evnjá (dial.) `drying shed without a ceiling' [f jā]Belorussian:ëŭnja `granary, drying shed' [f jā];éŭnja `granary, drying shed' [f jā];jaŭja (dial.) `granary, drying shed' [f jā] \{1\}Ukrainian:jévnja `granary, drying shed' [f jā]Polish:Proto-Balto-Slavic reconstruction: iouiaHLithuanian:jáuja `granary, drying shed, threshing shed' [f ā] 1 \{3\}Latvian:jaũja `threshing floor' [f ā]Old Prussian:Indo-European reconstruction: ieu-iH-eh₂IE meaning: granaryCertainty: +Page in Pokorny: 512Comments: It is evident that *evьja is a borrowing from Baltic. The Baltic word is a derivative of the word for `grain', Lith. javaĩ, which lacks a Slavic counterpart. The resyllabification of *iau̯-iā to *iau-i̯ā may account for the metatonical acute tone of both the Lithuanian and the Latvian form, if we assume that the original form was *iau̯-ìā. The East Slavic word *ovinъ apparently underwent the e- > o- shift (I do not share Andersen's objections to Trubačëv's Proto-Slavic reconstruction *evinъ, theoretical though it is).Other cognates:Notes:\{1\} The form without -n- has been recorded from 1540 onwards in many different shapes, e.g. ev'ja, jav'ja, evga and javga. According to Anikin (2005: 143), only the form jaŭja is known in the living language. The other forms are limited to areas that were inhabited by Lithuanians.\{2\} Since 1554 many variants have been recorded, e.g. jawia, jawgia, jewia, jowia. \{3\} There are many variants, viz. jáujė, jáujis, jáujas, jáujus. \{4\} The oldest source (1604) has the spelling jawyge (Toporov II: 21). -
19 evьn̨a
evьja; evьn̨a Grammatical information: f. iā; f. jā Proto-Slavic meaning: `granary, drying shed'Page in Trubačev: -Russian:évnja (W. dial.) `granary, drying shed' [f jā];ëvnja (Psk.) `granary, drying shed' [f jā];evnjá (dial.) `drying shed without a ceiling' [f jā]Belorussian:ëŭnja `granary, drying shed' [f jā];éŭnja `granary, drying shed' [f jā];jaŭja (dial.) `granary, drying shed' [f jā] \{1\}Ukrainian:jévnja `granary, drying shed' [f jā]Polish:Proto-Balto-Slavic reconstruction: iouiaHLithuanian:jáuja `granary, drying shed, threshing shed' [f ā] 1 \{3\}Latvian:jaũja `threshing floor' [f ā]Old Prussian:Indo-European reconstruction: ieu-iH-eh₂IE meaning: granaryCertainty: +Page in Pokorny: 512Comments: It is evident that *evьja is a borrowing from Baltic. The Baltic word is a derivative of the word for `grain', Lith. javaĩ, which lacks a Slavic counterpart. The resyllabification of *iau̯-iā to *iau-i̯ā may account for the metatonical acute tone of both the Lithuanian and the Latvian form, if we assume that the original form was *iau̯-ìā. The East Slavic word *ovinъ apparently underwent the e- > o- shift (I do not share Andersen's objections to Trubačëv's Proto-Slavic reconstruction *evinъ, theoretical though it is).Other cognates:Notes:\{1\} The form without -n- has been recorded from 1540 onwards in many different shapes, e.g. ev'ja, jav'ja, evga and javga. According to Anikin (2005: 143), only the form jaŭja is known in the living language. The other forms are limited to areas that were inhabited by Lithuanians.\{2\} Since 1554 many variants have been recorded, e.g. jawia, jawgia, jewia, jowia. \{3\} There are many variants, viz. jáujė, jáujis, jáujas, jáujus. \{4\} The oldest source (1604) has the spelling jawyge (Toporov II: 21). -
20 jь̑go
jь̑go Grammatical information: n. o Accent paradigm: c Proto-Slavic meaning: `yoke'Page in Trubačev: VIII 206-207Old Church Slavic:Russian:ígo `yoke (fig.)' [n o]Ukrainian:ího `yoke' [n o]Czech:Slovak:Polish:Slovincian:vjĩgo `yoke' [n o]Polabian:Serbo-Croatian:jìgo (Krk) `stabilizing cross-beam on primitive boats' [n o]Slovene:igọ̑ `yoke' [n s], ižę̑sa [Gens];jígọ (Carinthia) `yoke' [n s], jižę̑sa [Gens]Bulgarian:ígo `yoke' [n o]Proto-Balto-Slavic reconstruction: júʔgoLithuanian:jùngas `yoke' [m o] 1Latvian:Indo-European reconstruction: iug-ó-mIE meaning: yokeCertainty: +Page in Pokorny: 508Comments: The s-stem that occurs in Slovene and in late Church Slavic texts must be analogical after forms such as kolesa `wheels', ojesa `thills' (cf. Vaillant Gr. II: 237).Other cognates:Skt. yugá- `yoke, pair' [n];Notes:\{1\} The RSA gives the accentuations ȋgo and ígo. Skok has ȉgo with a question mark. The word igo seems to have been introduced into the literary language at a relatively recent stage.
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