ഉഴുവ
Appearance
Malayalam
[edit]Etymology
[edit]Inherited from Proto-Dravidian *uẓuw- (“tiger”).[1] Cognate with Kolami డువ్వ్ (ḍuvv), Gondi డువల్ (ḍuval) and Tamil உழுவை (uḻuvai).
Pronunciation
[edit]Noun
[edit]ഉഴുവ • (uḻuva)
Declension
[edit]Declension of ഉഴുവ | ||
---|---|---|
Singular | Plural | |
Nominative | ഉഴുവ (uḻuva) | ഉഴുവകൾ (uḻuvakaḷ) |
Vocative | ഉഴുവേ (uḻuvē) | ഉഴുവകളേ (uḻuvakaḷē) |
Accusative | ഉഴുവയെ (uḻuvaye) | ഉഴുവകളെ (uḻuvakaḷe) |
Dative | ഉഴുവയ്ക്ക് (uḻuvaykkŭ) | ഉഴുവകൾക്ക് (uḻuvakaḷkkŭ) |
Genitive | ഉഴുവയുടെ (uḻuvayuṭe) | ഉഴുവകളുടെ (uḻuvakaḷuṭe) |
Locative | ഉഴുവയിൽ (uḻuvayil) | ഉഴുവകളിൽ (uḻuvakaḷil) |
Sociative | ഉഴുവയോട് (uḻuvayōṭŭ) | ഉഴുവകളോട് (uḻuvakaḷōṭŭ) |
Instrumental | ഉഴുവയാൽ (uḻuvayāl) | ഉഴുവകളാൽ (uḻuvakaḷāl) |
References
[edit]- Burrow, T., Emeneau, M. B. (1984) “ur̤uvai”, in A Dravidian etymological dictionary, 2nd edition, Oxford University Press, →ISBN.
- https://olam.in/DictionaryML/ml/%E0%B4%89%E0%B4%B4%E0%B5%81%E0%B4%B5
- ^ Krishnamurti, Bhadriraju (2003) The Dravidian Languages (Cambridge Language Surveys), Cambridge University Press, →ISBN.