Jump to content

πƒπŒ°πŒΊπŒΊπŒΏπƒ

From Wiktionary, the free dictionary

Gothic

[edit]

Etymology

[edit]

From Proto-Germanic *sakkuz, from Latin saccus, from Ancient Greek σάκκος (sΓ‘kkos, β€œsack, bag; sackcloth”), from Semitic.

Noun

[edit]

πƒπŒ°πŒΊπŒΊπŒΏπƒ β€’ (sakkusm

  1. sack
  2. (Christianity) garb worn for penitence or mourning

Declension

[edit]
Masculine/feminine u-stem
singular plural
nominative πƒπŒ°πŒΊπŒΊπŒΏπƒ
sakkus
πƒπŒ°πŒΊπŒΊπŒΎπŒΏπƒ
sakkjus
vocative πƒπŒ°πŒΊπŒΊπŒ°πŒΏ
sakkau
πƒπŒ°πŒΊπŒΊπŒΎπŒΏπƒ
sakkjus
accusative πƒπŒ°πŒΊπŒΊπŒΏ
sakku
πƒπŒ°πŒΊπŒΊπŒΏπŒ½πƒ
sakkuns
genitive πƒπŒ°πŒΊπŒΊπŒ°πŒΏπƒ
sakkaus
πƒπŒ°πŒΊπŒΊπŒΉπ…πŒ΄
sakkiwΔ“
dative πƒπŒ°πŒΊπŒΊπŒ°πŒΏ
sakkau
πƒπŒ°πŒΊπŒΊπŒΏπŒΌ
sakkum