Reconstruction:Proto-Slavic/poslědьnъ
Appearance
Proto-Slavic
[edit]Etymology
[edit]From *po + *slědъ (“track”) + *-ьnъ.
Adjective
[edit]*poslědьnъ
Inflection
[edit]Indefinite declension of *poslědьnъ (hard)
Definite declension of *poslědьnъ (hard)
Descendants
[edit]- East Slavic:
- Old East Slavic: послѣдьнъ (poslědĭnŭ), послѣдьнии (poslědĭnii)
- Old Ruthenian: послѣ́дний (poslě́dnij)
- Ukrainian: послі́дній (poslídnij)
- Russian: после́дний (poslédnij)
- Old Ruthenian: послѣ́дний (poslě́dnij)
- Old East Slavic: послѣдьнъ (poslědĭnŭ), послѣдьнии (poslědĭnii)
- South Slavic:
- Old Church Slavonic:
- Old Cyrillic script: послѣдьнъ (poslědĭnŭ)
- Bulgarian: после́ден (posléden)
- Macedonian: последен (posleden)
- Serbo-Croatian:
- Cyrillic script: по̀следњӣ, по̀сљедњӣ
- Latin script: pòslednjī, pòsljednjī
- Slovene: poslẹ́dən (tonal orthography)
- Old Church Slavonic:
- West Slavic
Further reading
[edit]- Duridanov, I. V., Racheva, M., Todorov, T. A., editors (1996), “послед”, in Български етимологичен речник [Bulgarian Etymological Dictionary] (in Bulgarian), volume 5 (падѐж – пỳска), Sofia: Prof. Marin Drinov Pubg. House, →ISBN, page 540
- Vasmer, Max (1964–1973) “после́дний”, in Oleg Trubachyov, transl., Этимологический словарь русского языка [Etymological Dictionary of the Russian Language] (in Russian), Moscow: Progress