Jump to content

ministras

From Wiktionary, the free dictionary

Latin

[edit]

Pronunciation

[edit]

Verb

[edit]

ministrās

  1. second-person singular present active indicative of ministrō

Noun

[edit]

ministrās f

  1. accusative plural of ministra

Lithuanian

[edit]
Lithuanian Wikipedia has an article on:
Wikipedia lt

Etymology

[edit]

Ultimately from Latin minister, likely via Polish minister or Russian мини́стр (minístr).

Pronunciation

[edit]
This entry needs pronunciation information. If you are familiar with the IPA then please add some!

Noun

[edit]

mini̇̀stras m (plural mini̇̀strai, feminine mini̇̀strė) stress pattern 2

  1. (male) minister (government official who runs a government ministry)
    mini̇̀stras pi̇̀rmininkasprime minister
    áuklėjimo mini̇̀strasminister of education
    gynýbos mini̇̀strasminister of defense

Declension

[edit]
Declension of mini̇̀stras
singular
(vienaskaita)
plural
(daugiskaita)
nominative (vardininkas) mini̇̀stras mini̇̀strai
genitive (kilmininkas) mini̇̀stro mini̇̀strų
dative (naudininkas) mini̇̀strui mini̇̀strams
accusative (galininkas) mini̇̀strą ministrùs
instrumental (įnagininkas) ministrù mini̇̀strais
locative (vietininkas) ministrè mini̇̀struose
vocative (šauksmininkas) mini̇̀stre mini̇̀strai
[edit]

Further reading

[edit]

Portuguese

[edit]

Noun

[edit]

ministras

  1. plural of ministra

Verb

[edit]

ministras

  1. second-person singular present indicative of ministrar

Spanish

[edit]

Noun

[edit]

ministras f pl

  1. plural of ministra

Verb

[edit]

ministras

  1. second-person singular present indicative of ministrar