шалвия
Appearance
Pannonian Rusyn
[edit]Alternative forms
[edit]- шалфия (šalfija)
Etymology
[edit]Inherited from Old Slovak šalvia, ultimately from Latin salvia. Cognates include Czech šalvěj, Polish szałwia, Slovak šalvia and Yiddish שאַלוויִע (shalvie).
Pronunciation
[edit]Noun
[edit]шалвия (šalvija) f
Declension
[edit]singular | plural | |
---|---|---|
nominative | шалвия (šalvija) | шалвиї (šalviji) |
genitive | шалвиї (šalviji) | шалвийох (šalvijox) |
dative | шалвиї (šalviji) | шалвийом (šalvijom) |
accusative | шалвию (šalviju) | шалвиї (šalviji) |
instrumental | шалвию (šalviju) | шалвиями (šalvijami) |
locative | шалвиї (šalviji) | шалвийох (šalvijox) |
vocative | шалвийо (šalvijo) | шалвиї (šalviji) |
Derived terms
[edit](nouns):
- дзива шалвия f (dziva šalvija)
References
[edit]- Medʹeši, H., Fejsa, M., Timko-Djitko, O. (2010) “шалвия”, in Ramač, Ju., editor, Руско-сербски словнїк [Rusyn-Serbian Dictionary] (in Pannonian Rusyn), Novi Sad: Faculty of Philosophy
Categories:
- Pannonian Rusyn terms inherited from Old Slovak
- Pannonian Rusyn terms derived from Old Slovak
- Pannonian Rusyn terms derived from Latin
- Pannonian Rusyn terms with IPA pronunciation
- Rhymes:Pannonian Rusyn/ija
- Rhymes:Pannonian Rusyn/ija/3 syllables
- Pannonian Rusyn lemmas
- Pannonian Rusyn nouns
- Pannonian Rusyn feminine nouns
- rsk:Herbs
- rsk:Mint family plants