Gudija
Appearance
See also: gudija
Lithuanian
[edit]Alternative forms
[edit]Etymology
[edit]From gudas (“Belarusian”) + -ija, from southeastern dialectal gudėti (“start speaking another dialect or language”). The prior meaning is believed to have been "foreigner, unable to speak Lithuanian"[1] (compare Proto-Slavic *němьcь (“foreigner, non-Slav, specifically of Germanic peoples”) from *němъ (“mute, unclear or incomprehensible speaker”)), and later narrowed to refer to East Slavic peoples specifically.
Further etymology unclear, but possibly from Gothic *𐌲𐌿𐍄𐌰 (*guta, “Goth”), first adopted to refer to the Goths, then - to foreign peoples in general.[2]
Pronunciation
[edit]Proper noun
[edit]Gùdija f
- Belarus (a country in Eastern Europe)
Declension
[edit] Declension of Gudija
Synonyms
[edit]See also
[edit]- Airija
- Albanija
- Andora
- Armėnija
- Austrija
- Azerbaidžanas
- Baltarusija
- Belgija
- Bosnija ir Hercegovina
- Bulgarija
- Čekija
- Danija
- Estija
- Graikija
- Gruzija
- Gudija
- Islandija
- Ispanija
- Italija
- Jungtinė Karalystė
- Juodkalnija
- Kazachstanas
- Kipras
- Kosovas
- Kroatija
- Latvija
- Lenkija
- Lichtenšteinas
- Lietuva
- Liuksemburgas
- Makedonija
- Malta
- Moldavija
- Monakas
- Nyderlandai
- Norvegija
- Portugalija
- Prancūzija
- Rumunija
- Rusija
- San Marinas
- Serbija
- Slovakija
- Slovėnija
- Suomija
- Švedija
- Šveicarija
- Turkija
- Ukraina
- Vatikanas
- Vengrija
- Vokietija