Балтийское море
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Russian
[edit]Etymology
[edit]Балти́йское (Baltíjskoje, “Baltic”) + мо́ре (móre, “sea”), from Medieval Latin Mare Balticum; Latin being the standard language of medieval European cartography, understood by explorers and navigators across different vernacular tongues. Tradition holds that the name was coined by Adam of Bremen in 1075, deriving from Latin balteus (“belt”) due to the shape of the sea extending around the continent like a belt.
Pronunciation
[edit]Proper noun
[edit]Балти́йское мо́ре • (Baltíjskoje móre) n inan (genitive Балти́йского мо́ря)
- Baltic Sea (a sea in Northern Europe)
- Synonym: Варя́жское море (Varjážskoje more)
Declension
[edit]Declension of Балти́йское мо́ре (inan sg-only neut-form soft-stem accent-a)
singular | |
---|---|
nominative | Балти́йское мо́ре Baltíjskoje móre |
genitive | Балти́йского мо́ря Baltíjskovo mórja |
dative | Балти́йскому мо́рю Baltíjskomu mórju |
accusative | Балти́йское мо́ре Baltíjskoje móre |
instrumental | Балти́йским мо́рем Baltíjskim mórem |
prepositional | Балти́йском мо́ре Baltíjskom móre |
Related terms
[edit]- балти́ец (baltíjec)
- балти́йский (baltíjskij)
- Ба́лтика (Báltika)
- Приба́лтика (Pribáltika)
- приба́лт (pribált)
- прибалти́йский (pribaltíjskij)
Categories:
- Russian compound terms
- Russian terms borrowed from Medieval Latin
- Russian terms derived from Medieval Latin
- Russian terms derived from Latin
- Russian terms with IPA pronunciation
- Russian terms with audio pronunciation
- Russian lemmas
- Russian proper nouns
- Russian multiword terms
- Russian neuter nouns
- Russian inanimate nouns
- ru:Seas
- Russian soft-stem neuter-form nouns
- Russian soft-stem neuter-form accent-a nouns
- Russian nouns with accent pattern a