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кошмар

From Wiktionary, the free dictionary

Bulgarian

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Etymology

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Borrowed from French cauchemar, from Middle French cauchemare, from Old French cauquemare. First element from Latin calcō (I trample, tread on); second element from Middle Dutch mare (phantom, spirit, nightmare), from Proto-Germanic *marǭ (nightmare, incubus), from Proto-Indo-European *mer- (to die). See cauchemar.

Pronunciation

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  • IPA(key): [koʃˈmar]
  • Audio:(file)
  • Rhymes: -ar

Noun

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кошма́р (košmárm (relational adjective кошма́рен)

  1. nightmare

Declension

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Macedonian

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Etymology

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Borrowed from French cauchemar, from Middle French cauchemare, from Old French cauquemare. First element from Latin calcare (I trample, tread on); second element from Middle Dutch mare (phantom, spirit, nightmare), from Proto-Germanic *marǭ (nightmare, incubus), from Proto-Indo-European *mer- (to die). See cauchemar.

Pronunciation

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Noun

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кошмар (košmarm (plural кошмари, relational adjective кошмарен)

  1. nightmare
  2. (figurative) shock
  3. chaos, disarray

Declension

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Declension of кошмар
singular plural
indefinite кошмар (košmar) кошмари (košmari)
definite unspecified кошмарот (košmarot) кошмарите (košmarite)
definite proximal кошмаров (košmarov) кошмариве (košmarive)
definite distal кошмарон (košmaron) кошмарине (košmarine)
vocative кошмару (košmaru) кошмари (košmari)
count form кошмара (košmara)

Russian

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Alternative forms

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Etymology

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Connected to French cauchemar, from Middle French cauchemare, from Old French cauquemare. First element from Latin calcare (I trample, tread on); second element from Middle Dutch mare (phantom, spirit, nightmare), from Proto-Germanic *marǭ (nightmare, incubus), from Proto-Indo-European *mer- (to die). See cauchemar.

Pronunciation

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Noun

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кошма́р (košmárm inan (genitive кошма́ра, nominative plural кошма́ры, genitive plural кошма́ров, relational adjective кошма́рный)

  1. nightmare
  2. (figuratively) disaster, horror (something extremely unpleasant)
    Synonyms: у́жас (úžas), пизде́ц (pizdéc) (vulgar), абза́ц (abzác) (euphemistic)

Declension

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Derived terms

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Descendants

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Interjection

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кошма́р (košmár)

  1. it's terrible!
    Synonym: у́жас (úžas)

Serbo-Croatian

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Etymology

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Borrowed from French cauchemar, from Middle French cauchemare, from Old French cauquemare. First element from Latin calcare (I trample, tread on); second element from Middle Dutch mare (phantom, spirit, nightmare), from Proto-Germanic *marǭ (nightmare, incubus), from Proto-Indo-European *mer- (to die). See cauchemar.

Noun

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ко̏шма̄р m (Latin spelling kȍšmār)

  1. nightmare
  2. incubus

Declension

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Ukrainian

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Ukrainian Wikipedia has an article on:
Wikipedia uk

Etymology

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Borrowed from French cauchemar, from Middle French cauchemare, from Old French cauquemare. First element from Latin calcare (I trample, tread on); second element from Middle Dutch mare (phantom, spirit, nightmare), from Proto-Germanic *marǭ (nightmare, incubus), from Proto-Indo-European *mer- (to die).

Pronunciation

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Noun

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кошма́р (košmárm inan (genitive кошма́ру, nominative plural кошма́ри, genitive plural кошма́рів, relational adjective кошма́рний)

  1. nightmare

Declension

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Further reading

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