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  • 1 ȍpakъ

    ȍpakъ; ȍpako; ȍpaky \{1\} Grammatical information: adv. Accent paradigm: c Proto-Slavic meaning: `the other way round'
    Old Church Slavic:
    opaky (Supr.) `the other way round, behind one's back' [adv]
    Russian:
    ópak(o) (dial.) `back, backwards, the other way round' [adv]
    Czech:
    opak `contrary' [m o]
    Old Czech:
    opak `backwards, the other way round' [adv]
    Slovak:
    opak `contrary' [m o]
    Polish:
    opak `(na o.) the other way round, upside down, wrongly' [adv]
    Serbo-Croatian:
    ȍpāk `the other way round' [adj/adv];
    Čak. ȍpå̄k (Vrgada) `the other way round' [adj/adv]
    Slovene:
    opȃk `backwards, the other way round' [adv], opáka [Gens]
    Bulgarian:
    ópak `backwards, the other way round' [adv]
    Indo-European reconstruction: h₂epo-h₃ekw-
    Comments: The quantitative variation in the second syllable reflects accentual mobility, as pretonic long vowels were shortened but posttonic long vowels were not. The laryngeal of the second syllable had been lost with compensatory lengthening at an earlier stage.
    Other cognates:
    Skt. ápāka- (RV+) `located behind, distant, aside' [adj];
    Skt. ápākā́ (RV) `behind' [adv];
    Skt. apākā́t (RV) `behind' [adv];
    OIc. ǫfugr `turned the wrong way, wrong' [adj]

    Slovenščina-angleščina big slovar > ȍpakъ

  • 2 ȍpako

    ȍpakъ; ȍpako; ȍpaky \{1\} Grammatical information: adv. Accent paradigm: c Proto-Slavic meaning: `the other way round'
    Old Church Slavic:
    opaky (Supr.) `the other way round, behind one's back' [adv]
    Russian:
    ópak(o) (dial.) `back, backwards, the other way round' [adv]
    Czech:
    opak `contrary' [m o]
    Old Czech:
    opak `backwards, the other way round' [adv]
    Slovak:
    opak `contrary' [m o]
    Polish:
    opak `(na o.) the other way round, upside down, wrongly' [adv]
    Serbo-Croatian:
    ȍpāk `the other way round' [adj/adv];
    Čak. ȍpå̄k (Vrgada) `the other way round' [adj/adv]
    Slovene:
    opȃk `backwards, the other way round' [adv], opáka [Gens]
    Bulgarian:
    ópak `backwards, the other way round' [adv]
    Indo-European reconstruction: h₂epo-h₃ekw-
    Comments: The quantitative variation in the second syllable reflects accentual mobility, as pretonic long vowels were shortened but posttonic long vowels were not. The laryngeal of the second syllable had been lost with compensatory lengthening at an earlier stage.
    Other cognates:
    Skt. ápāka- (RV+) `located behind, distant, aside' [adj];
    Skt. ápākā́ (RV) `behind' [adv];
    Skt. apākā́t (RV) `behind' [adv];
    OIc. ǫfugr `turned the wrong way, wrong' [adj]

    Slovenščina-angleščina big slovar > ȍpako

  • 3 ȍpaky

    ȍpakъ; ȍpako; ȍpaky \{1\} Grammatical information: adv. Accent paradigm: c Proto-Slavic meaning: `the other way round'
    Old Church Slavic:
    opaky (Supr.) `the other way round, behind one's back' [adv]
    Russian:
    ópak(o) (dial.) `back, backwards, the other way round' [adv]
    Czech:
    opak `contrary' [m o]
    Old Czech:
    opak `backwards, the other way round' [adv]
    Slovak:
    opak `contrary' [m o]
    Polish:
    opak `(na o.) the other way round, upside down, wrongly' [adv]
    Serbo-Croatian:
    ȍpāk `the other way round' [adj/adv];
    Čak. ȍpå̄k (Vrgada) `the other way round' [adj/adv]
    Slovene:
    opȃk `backwards, the other way round' [adv], opáka [Gens]
    Bulgarian:
    ópak `backwards, the other way round' [adv]
    Indo-European reconstruction: h₂epo-h₃ekw-
    Comments: The quantitative variation in the second syllable reflects accentual mobility, as pretonic long vowels were shortened but posttonic long vowels were not. The laryngeal of the second syllable had been lost with compensatory lengthening at an earlier stage.
    Other cognates:
    Skt. ápāka- (RV+) `located behind, distant, aside' [adj];
    Skt. ápākā́ (RV) `behind' [adv];
    Skt. apākā́t (RV) `behind' [adv];
    OIc. ǫfugr `turned the wrong way, wrong' [adj]

    Slovenščina-angleščina big slovar > ȍpaky

  • 4 rǫ̑bъ

    rǫ̑bъ Grammatical information: m. o Accent paradigm: c
    Church Slavic:
    rǫbъ (Serb.-CS) `cloth' [m o]
    Russian:
    rub `coarse cloathing, rags' [m o]
    Belorussian:
    rub `hem, seam' [m o]
    Ukrainian:
    rub `hem, seam' [m o]
    Czech:
    rub `hem, the wrong side' [m o]
    Slovak:
    rub `hem, the wrong side' [m o]
    Polish:
    rąb (obs.) `hem, border, scar' [m o], ręba [Gens]
    Serbo-Croatian:
    rūb `hem, seam, edge, brink' [m o], rūba [Gens];
    Čak. rūb (Vrgada) `edge, end' [m o], rūba [Gens]
    Slovene:
    rǫ̑b `hem, seam, cloth, plain clothing' [m o]
    Bulgarian:
    răb `hem, edge, border' [m o]
    Proto-Balto-Slavic reconstruction: rumʔbas
    Lithuanian:
    rum̃bas `scar, notch, waist (of skirt or trousers)' [m o] 4;
    rùmbas `scar, notch, waist (of skirt or trousers)' [m o] 3
    Latvian:
    rùobs `notch' [m o] \{1\}
    Indo-European reconstruction: rmb
    Notes:
    \{1\} This form actually has uo < *am before a homorganic obstruent.

    Slovenščina-angleščina big slovar > rǫ̑bъ

  • 5 ědro

    ědro Grammatical information: n. o Proto-Slavic meaning: `bosom'
    Page in Trubačev: VI 43
    Old Church Slavic:
    jadra `embrace, bosom' [Nompn o]
    Church Slavic:
    jadro `depth, womb, bosom' [Nompn o]
    Czech:
    ňadro `breast, bosom' [n o];
    ňadra `breast, bosom' [Nompn o]
    Old Czech:
    ňadra `breast, bosom' [Nompn o];
    ňádra `breast, bosom' [n o]
    Polish:
    jadro `net' [n o]
    Serbo-Croatian:
    jȅdro `sail' [n o], jèdra [Nom p];
    jèdro (Vuk) `sail' [n o] \{1\};
    Čak. ȉdro `sail' [n o], idrå̃ [Nom p];
    Čak. jȁdro (Novi) `sail' [n o]
    Slovene:
    jádrọ `sail, "bosom" of a net' [n o];
    nẹ̑drọ `bosom' [n o];
    nẹ̑drje `bosom' [n jo], nẹ̑drja `bosom' [Nomp jo]
    Comments: The forms with n- originate from the syntagms *vъn ědra and *vъn ědrěxъ, cf. vь nědrěxъ (Supr. 244, 26)
    Notes:
    \{1\} According to the RJA, the accentuation of jèdro is wrong.

    Slovenščina-angleščina big slovar > ědro

  • 6 lixъ

    lixъ Grammatical information: adj. o Proto-Slavic meaning: `superfluous, incorrect'
    Page in Trubačev: XV 99-102
    Old Church Slavic:
    lixъ `excessive, superfluous' [adj o]
    Russian:
    lixój `brave, quick, swift, evil, heavy, difficult' [adj o];
    lixój (dial.) `sharp, strong' [adj o]
    Czech:
    lichý `lonesome, isolated, empty' [adj o]
    Old Czech:
    lichý `unequal, wrong, evil, simple, empty' [adj o]
    Slovak:
    lichý (lit.) `deceptive, empty, incorrect' [adj o];
    lichý (dial.) `deceptive, empty, incorrect, poor, insignificant' [adj o]
    Polish:
    lichy `poor, miserable, insignificant, mean, (dial.) evil' [adj o]
    Old Polish:
    lichy `incorrect, evil, poor, pitiful, insignificant' [adj o]
    Serbo-Croatian:
    lȉh `exclusive' [adj o];
    lȋh `unnecessary, false, empty, odd (number)' [adj o]
    Slovene:
    lȋh `uneven, odd (number)' [adj o]
    Indo-European reconstruction: leikʷ-so-
    Page in Pokorny: 669

    Slovenščina-angleščina big slovar > lixъ

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