владика

Bulgarian

Etymology

Inherited from Old Church Slavonic владꙑка (vladyka). By surface analysis, вла́да (vláda, rule) + -ика (-ika).

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): [vɫɐˈdikɐ]
  • (file)

Noun

влади́ка • (vladíka) m (feminine влади́чица)

  1. bishop
  2. (historical) master, lord

Declension

Derived terms

  • влади́чество (vladíčestvo, dominance)

References

Macedonian

Etymology

Cognates include Old Church Slavonic владꙑка (vladyka), Bulgarian влади́ка (vladíka), Russian влады́ка (vladýka).

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): [ˈvɫadika]

Noun

владика • (vladika) m (relational adjective владиков)

  1. bishop

Declension

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References

  • владика in Makedonisch Info (germansko-makedonski rečnik, makedonsko-germanski rečnik)

Ukrainian

Etymology

Borrowed from Old Church Slavonic владꙑка (vladyka), itself derived from Old Church Slavonic владѣти (vladěti), from Proto-Slavic *volděti (to expand).

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): [wɫɐˈdɪkɐ]

Noun

влади́ка • (vladýka) m pers (genitive влади́ки, nominative plural влади́ки, genitive plural влади́к, feminine влади́чиця)

  1. sovereign, lord, arbiter, overlord
  2. bishop
  3. (biblical, capitalized) Lord, God

Declension

References

  • Rusanivskyi, V. M., editor (2012), “влади́ка”, in Словник української мови: у 20 т. [Dictionary of the Ukrainian Language: in 20 vols] (in Ukrainian), volumes 3 (відстава́ння – ґура́льня), Kyiv: Ukrainian Lingua-Information Fund, →ISBN
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