π²πΏπΌπ°
Gothic
Etymology
From Proto-Germanic *gumΓ΄, from Proto-Indo-European *dΚ°Η΅Κ°mΜ₯mΕ. Germanic cognates include Old Saxon gumo, Old High German gumo, Old Norse gumi (Norwegian gume), Old English guma. The Indo-European root is also the source of Latin homΕ, Proto-Baltic *ΕΎmo- (Old Lithuanian ΕΎmuo).
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /ΛΙ‘u.ma/
Noun
π²πΏπΌπ° β’ (guma) m
- man
- Gothic Bible, Luke 19.2:
- πΎπ°π· ππ°πΉΒ· π²πΏπΌπ° π½π°πΌπΉπ½ π·π°πΉππ°π½π πΆπ°πΊπΊπ°πΉπΏπΒ· ππ°π· π π°π ππ°πΏππ°πΌπ°πΈπ»π΄πΉπ πΌπππ°ππΎπ΄ πΎπ°π· π π°π π²π°π±πΉπ²π
- jah saiΒ· guma namin haitans zakkaiusΒ· sah was fauramaΓΎleis mΕtarjΔ jah was gabigs
- And, behold, there was a man named Zacchaeus, which was the chief among the publicans, and he was rich.
- Gothic Bible, Luke 19.2:
Declension
Masculine an-stem | ||
---|---|---|
Singular | Plural | |
Nominative | π²πΏπΌπ° guma |
π²πΏπΌπ°π½π gumans |
Vocative | π²πΏπΌπ° guma |
π²πΏπΌπ°π½π gumans |
Accusative | π²πΏπΌπ°π½ guman |
π²πΏπΌπ°π½π gumans |
Genitive | π²πΏπΌπΉπ½π gumins |
π²πΏπΌπ°π½π΄ gumanΔ |
Dative | π²πΏπΌπΉπ½ gumin |
π²πΏπΌπ°πΌ gumam |
Hypernyms
Derived terms
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