Jump to content

Pizā

From Wiktionary, the free dictionary
See also: piza and Piza

Livonian

[edit]

Etymology

[edit]

Historically Pissen (attested from 1502 as weg, den von Stanszen vnnd Piszen herkombt) – Latvian Miķeļbāka, Pizesciems (Pize) or officially Miķeļtornis, Livonian Pizā. This toponym could be of Baltic origin: compare Old Prussian Pysekaym (1384), Pisdekaym (1388), Piselauk (1419), and parallels can be found in Lithuanian toponymy as well, e.g. Pisa (river); compare also Latvian Pisiņš (lake), Pisupīte, etc. The Lithuanian linguist A. Vanagas connects all these toponyms with Latvian pisa (a bog, marsh, swamp without a bottom where only small birches and firs grow), pise (very thick forest). An Old Prussian personal name Pisz (1261) should be noted too.[1]

Pronunciation

[edit]

Proper noun

[edit]

Pizā

  1. Miķeļtornis (a village in Courland, Latvia)

Declension

[edit]
Declension of Pizā (39)
singular (ikšlug) plural (pǟgiņlug)
nominative (nominatīv) Pizā
genitive (genitīv) Pizā
partitive (partitīv) Pizzõ
dative (datīv) Pizān
instrumental (instrumentāl) Pizāks
illative (illatīv) Pizzõ
inessive (inesīv) Pizās
elative (elatīv) Pizāst

References

[edit]
  1. ^ Kersti Boiko, Ziemeļkurzemes piekrastes lībiešu ciemu vietvārdi in Kersti Boiko's Lībieši – rakstu krājums, pages 219-220