пыг
Northern Mansi
Etymology
From Proto-Uralic *pojka (“son, boy”). Cognates include Northern Khanty пох (poh), Hungarian fiú, Finnish poika.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): [pi̯ːɣ]
Declension
Inflection of пыг (pyg) | |||
---|---|---|---|
singular | dual | plural | |
nominative | пыг (pyg) | пыгыг (pygyg) | пыгыт (pygyt) |
locative | пыгт (pygt) | пыгыгт (pygygt) | пыгытт (pygytt) |
lative | пыгн (pygn) | пыгыгн (pygygn) | пыгытн (pygytn) |
ablative | пыгныл (pygnyl) | пыгыгныл (pygygnyl) | пыгытныл (pygytnyl) |
instrumental | пыгыл (pygyl) | пыгыгныл (pygygnyl) | пыгытыл (pygytyl) |
translative | пыгыг (pygyg) | ―― | ―― |
Possessive forms of пыг (pyg) | |||
---|---|---|---|
possessor | single possession | double possession | multiple possession |
1st person sing. | пыгум (pygum) | пыгагум (pygagum) | пыганум (pyganum) |
2nd person sing. | пыгын (pygyn) | пыгагын (pygagyn) | пыган (pygan) |
3rd person sing. | пыге (pyge) | пыгаге (pygage) | пыганэ (pyganè) |
1st person dual | пыгме̄н (pygmēn) | пыгагаме̄н (pygagamēn) | пыганаме̄н (pyganamēn) |
2nd person dual | пыгы̄н (pygȳn) | пыгагы̄н (pygagȳn) | пыганы̄н (pyganȳn) |
3rd person dual | пыге̄ (pygē) | пыгаге̄н (pygagēn) | пыганэ̄н (pyganè̄n) |
1st person plural | пыгув (pyguw) | пыгагув (pygaguw) | пыганув (pyganuw) |
2nd person plural | пыгы̄н (pygȳn) | пыгагы̄н (pygagȳn) | пыганы̄н (pyganȳn) |
3rd person plural | пыганыл (pyganyl) | пыгага̄ныл (pygagānyl) | пыга̄ныл (pygānyl) |
References
- Afanasʹjeva, K. V., Sobjanina, S. A. (2012) “пыг”, in Školʹnyj mansijsko-russkij slovarʹ) [Mansi-Russian school dictionary], Khanty-Mansiysk: RIO IRO
- Elena Skribnik, editor (2016), Ob-Ugric Database: analysed text corpora and dictionaries for less described Ob-Ugric dialects, University of Munich
- Entry #785 in Uralonet, online Uralic etymological database of the Hungarian Research Centre for Linguistics.
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