stotas
Appearance
Lithuanian
[edit]Etymology
[edit]Deverbal to-stem noun from stóti (“to stand up”) + -tas with metatony[1] on the root stem. Cognate with Serbo-Croatian stȃs (“stature, build”).
Noun
[edit]stõtas m (plural stõtai) stress pattern 2[2]
Declension
[edit]Declension of stõtas
singular (vienaskaita) | plural (daugiskaita) | |
---|---|---|
nominative (vardininkas) | stõtas | stõtai |
genitive (kilmininkas) | stõto | stõtų |
dative (naudininkas) | stõtui | stõtams |
accusative (galininkas) | stõtą | stotùs |
instrumental (įnagininkas) | stotù | stõtais |
locative (vietininkas) | stotè | stõtuose |
vocative (šauksmininkas) | stõte | stõtai |
Related terms
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ Kim, Ronald (2018) “The Phonology of Balto-Slavic”, in Jared S. Klein, Brian Joseph, and Matthias Fritz, editors, Handbook of Comparative Indo-European Linguistics: An International Handbook[1], Berlin: de Gruyter, →ISBN, page 1982: “stóti ‘stand up’ : stõtas ‘shape, stature’”
- ^ “stotas”, in Lietuvių kalbos žodynas [Dictionary of the Lithuanian language], lkz.lt, 1941–2024