грькъ
Old Church Slavonic
Etymology
From Proto-Slavic *grьkъ.
Noun
грькъ • (grĭkŭ) m
- a Greek
- from Vita Methodii, 0500200-0500220:
- и соуть въ нꙑ въшьли оучителе мнози крьстиꙗни из Влахъ и из Грькъ и из Нѣмьць, оучаще нꙑ различь.
- i sutĭ vŭ ny vŭšĭli učitele mnozi krĭstijani iz Vlaxŭ i iz Grĭkŭ i iz Němĭcĭ, učašte ny različĭ.
- And many Christian teachers have come to us from among the Latins, Greeks and Germans, teaching us in various ways.
- from Vita Methodii, 0500200-0500220:
Declension
Declension of грькъ (o-stem)
singular | dual | plural | |
---|---|---|---|
nominative | грькъ grĭkŭ |
грька grĭka |
грьци grĭci |
genitive | грька grĭka |
грькоу grĭku |
грькъ grĭkŭ |
dative | грькоу, грькови grĭku, grĭkovi |
грькома grĭkoma |
грькомъ grĭkomŭ |
accusative | грькъ, грька grĭkŭ, grĭka |
грька grĭka |
грькꙑ grĭky |
instrumental | грькомъ grĭkomŭ |
грькома grĭkoma |
грькꙑ grĭky |
locative | грьцѣ grĭcě |
грькоу grĭku |
грьцѣхъ grĭcěxŭ |
vocative | грьче grĭče |
грька grĭka |
грьци grĭci |
Derived terms
- грьчьскъ (grĭčĭskŭ)
This article is issued from Wiktionary. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.