гэканье
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Russian
[edit]Etymology 1
[edit]гэ́кать (hɛ́katʹ) + -анье (-anʹje, verbal abstract noun suffix).
Pronunciation
[edit]Noun
[edit]гэ́канье • (hɛ́kanʹje) n inan (genitive гэ́канья, nominative plural гэ́канья, genitive plural гэ́каний)
- (phonology) "hekanye", the non-standard pronunciation of letter Г (G), г (g) as [ɣ] or [ɦ] and [x] or [h] in devoiced positions, instead of the standard [ɡ] and [k] in devoiced positions as heard in Southern Russian (the European part, south from Voronezh), Ukrainian and Belarusian, also commonly by Russians or Russian speakers in Ukraine and Belarus.
Declension
[edit]Declension of гэ́канье (inan neut-form vowel-stem accent-a)
singular | plural | |
---|---|---|
nominative | гэ́канье hɛ́kanʹje |
гэ́канья hɛ́kanʹja |
genitive | гэ́канья hɛ́kanʹja |
гэ́каний hɛ́kanij |
dative | гэ́канью hɛ́kanʹju |
гэ́каньям hɛ́kanʹjam |
accusative | гэ́канье hɛ́kanʹje |
гэ́канья hɛ́kanʹja |
instrumental | гэ́каньем hɛ́kanʹjem |
гэ́каньями hɛ́kanʹjami |
prepositional | гэ́канье hɛ́kanʹje |
гэ́каньях hɛ́kanʹjax |
Related terms
[edit]- гэ́кать (hɛ́katʹ)
Etymology 2
[edit]гэ́кать (gɛ́katʹ) + -анье (-anʹje, verbal abstract noun suffix).
Pronunciation
[edit]Noun
[edit]гэ́канье • (gɛ́kanʹje) n inan (genitive гэ́канья, nominative plural гэ́канья, genitive plural гэ́каний)
- (phonology, rare) "gekanye", the standard and common pronunciation of letter Г (G), г (g) as [ɡ] and [k] in devoiced positions. This is the feature of the standard Russian and the most common pronunciation in Northern and Central dialects and spread in most parts of Eastern Russian - Urals, Siberia and the Far East.
Usage notes
[edit]- The letter Г (G), г (g) has different pronunciations in standard Russian versus Ukrainian, Belarusian and Southern Russian but there is no separate letter for the different sounds. To make the distinction clearer, usually words like "Ukrainian", "Southern", "Kuban", etc. are used to refer to the [ɣ] or [ɦ] sounds.
- Loanwords with (hard) "g and "h" are often mixed up in Russian, Ukrainian and Belarusian, although the Cyrillic "г" is not always used to transliterate these letters. Ukrainian has letter ґ (g) to specifically transliterate foreign "g" but it's not very common.
- There are some occurrences when [ɣ] and [x] (in devoiced positions) is not considered non-standard and is acceptable, at least as a variant.
Declension
[edit]Declension of гэ́канье (inan neut-form vowel-stem accent-a)
singular | plural | |
---|---|---|
nominative | гэ́канье gɛ́kanʹje |
гэ́канья gɛ́kanʹja |
genitive | гэ́канья gɛ́kanʹja |
гэ́каний gɛ́kanij |
dative | гэ́канью gɛ́kanʹju |
гэ́каньям gɛ́kanʹjam |
accusative | гэ́канье gɛ́kanʹje |
гэ́канья gɛ́kanʹja |
instrumental | гэ́каньем gɛ́kanʹjem |
гэ́каньями gɛ́kanʹjami |
prepositional | гэ́канье gɛ́kanʹje |
гэ́каньях gɛ́kanʹjax |
Related terms
[edit]- гэ́кать (gɛ́katʹ)
Categories:
- Russian terms suffixed with -анье
- Russian 3-syllable words
- Russian terms with IPA pronunciation
- Russian lemmas
- Russian nouns
- Russian terms with irregular pronunciations
- Russian neuter nouns
- Russian inanimate nouns
- ru:Phonology
- Russian vowel-stem neuter-form nouns
- Russian vowel-stem neuter-form accent-a nouns
- Russian nouns with accent pattern a
- Russian nouns ending in -ье
- Russian terms with rare senses