Перевод: со словенского на английский

с английского на словенский

(for+other+animals)

  • 1 kotъ

    I. kotъ I Grammatical information: m. o
    Page in Trubačev: XI 211-212
    Czech:
    kót (dial.) `post-natal period' [m o]
    Polish:
    kot (dial.) `place where forest animals young' [m o]
    Serbo-Croatian:
    kȏt `(time of) having young, litter, breed' [m o]
    Slovene:
    kòt `brood, litter' [m o], kóta [Gens]
    Macedonian:
    kot `(time of) having young, breed' [m o]
    II. kotъ II Grammatical information: m. o Proto-Slavic meaning: `booth, sty'
    Page in Trubačev: XI 211-212
    Old Czech:
    kot `booth, stall (market)' [m o];
    kót `booth, stall (market)' [m o]
    Serbo-Croatian:
    kȏt (dial.) `sty for domestic animals, young animals' [m. o]
    Other cognates:
    OE heaðor `incarceration, jail' [n]

    Slovenščina-angleščina big slovar > kotъ

  • 2 kotьcь

    kotьcь Grammatical information: m. jo
    Page in Trubačev: XI 214-215
    Church Slavic:
    kotьcь `cage' [m jo]
    Russian:
    kotéc (dial.) `(fish-)trap made from brushwood' [m jo]
    Czech:
    kotec `sty' [m jo]
    Old Czech:
    kotec `booth, stall (market)' [m jo]
    Old Polish:
    kociec `enclosure for domestic animals' [m jo]
    Serbo-Croatian:
    kòtac `cattle-shed, weir' [m o]
    Slovene:
    kótǝc `compartment of a stable, pig-sty, bird-cage' [m o]
    Other cognates:
    OE heađor `incarceration, jail' [n]

    Slovenščina-angleščina big slovar > kotьcь

  • 3 àgnę

    àgnę Grammatical information: n. nt Accent paradigm: a Proto-Slavic meaning: `lamb'
    Page in Trubačev: I 54-55
    Old Church Slavic:
    agnę (Zogr., Supr.) `lamb' [n nt]
    Old Russian:
    jagnja `lamb' [n nt]
    Czech:
    jehně `lamb' [n nt]
    Slovak:
    jahňa `lamb' [n nt]
    Polish:
    jagnię `lamb' [n nt]
    Serbo-Croatian:
    jȁgne `lamb' [n nt];
    Čak. jȁńe (Vrgada) `lamb' [n nt], jå̃ńci [Nom p]
    Slovene:
    jágnje `lamb' [n nt];
    ágnje `lamb' [n nt]
    Bulgarian:
    ágne `lamb' [n nt];
    jágne `lamb' [n nt]
    Indo-European reconstruction: h₂egʷ-n-
    IE meaning: lamb
    Certainty: +
    Page in Pokorny: 9
    Comments: PSl. * agn- < * h₂egʷ-n- (N.B. Winter's law) with the diminutive suffix *- < *- ent-, which is common in designations of young animals. Slavic forms without a secondary suffix do not exist.
    Other cognates:
    Gk. ἀμνός `lamb' [f/m];
    Lat. agnus `lamb'
    \{1\}
    Notes:
    \{1\} Slavic *agnędъ `black poplar', which Trubačev derives from the word for `lamb', may be related to Greek ἄμνος `chaste-tree'. I tentatively posit a root *h₂eǵ-.

    Slovenščina-angleščina big slovar > àgnę

  • 4 bъrna

    bъrna Grammatical information: f. ā
    Page in Trubačev: III 130
    Slovene:
    bŕna (Steiermark) `carnival mask depicting an animal' [f ā]
    Bulgarian:
    bắrna `lip' [f ā]
    Macedonian:
    brna `nose-ring (of animals)' [f ā]
    Lithuanian:
    burnà `mouth, face' [f ā] 3
    Latvian:
    puȓns `snout' [m o]
    Comments: The root can be reconstructed as a zero grade * bʰrH-, wich may be identical with the root of Lat. forāre, OHG borōn `perforate'. For the initial p of the Latvian form, see Kiparsky 1968.
    Other cognates:
    Arm. beran `mouth'

    Slovenščina-angleščina big slovar > bъrna

  • 5 morà

    morà Grammatical information: f. ā Proto-Slavic meaning: `nightly spirit, nightmare'
    Page in Trubačev: XIX 211-214
    Church Slavic:
    mora ( SerbCS) `sorceress' [f ā]
    Russian:
    móra (dial.) `mythological female creature, ghost, darkness' [m/f ā] \{1\}
    Ukrainian:
    móra (dial.) `nightmare, house-spirit' [f ā]
    Czech:
    můra \{4\} `nightmare, mythological creature that suffocates people in their sleep, moth' [f ā]
    Slovak:
    mora, mura `demonical mythological creature that torments people in their sleep' [f ā]
    Polish:
    mora (dial.) `nightly spirit that attacks people and horses in their sleep, nightly apparition, nightmare' [f ā]
    Slovincian:
    mùora (dial.) `nightmare, its female personification' [f ā]
    Serbo-Croatian:
    mòra `nightmare' [f ā] \{2\};
    Čak. Morȁ (Orbanići) `[personified] nightmare, female phantom (appears early in the morning, walks with the sound of a cat tripping;
    makes a habit of sitting on people's throats and nearly suffocating them' [f ā]
    Slovene:
    móra `nightmare, owl' [f ā] \{3\}
    Bulgarian:
    morá `nightmare' [f ā]
    Indo-European reconstruction: mor-eh₂
    Certainty: +
    Page in Pokorny: 735-736
    Comments: The image of a (female) ghost who induces nightmares is apparently common to Slavic, Germanic and, possibly, Celtic. The root of this creature's name is unclear. Pokorny assumes a connection with *mer- `aufreiben, reiben; packen, rauben', which is not entirely convincing. For a discussion of the relationship between *mora and *mara, see s.v. *mara.
    Other cognates:
    OIc. mara `nightmare' [f];
    OE mare `nightmare' [f];
    OIr. mor-rígain `goddess of the battlefield, female demon' [f] \{5\}
    Notes:
    \{1\} The noun also occurs in Ru. kikímora m/f `house-sprite that spins at night'. \{2\} The folkloristic belief that the mora is an evil female creature (witch, sorceress) is mentioned in Karadžić's dictionary (cf. the form from Orbanići). \{3\} There is a variant mȏra `nightmare, house-spirit, creature that at night suffocates people in their sleep and harms animals' ( Slovar slovenskega jezika II: 238. \{4\} In dialects, we find a variant mora.

    Slovenščina-angleščina big slovar > morà

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