πΊπ°ππΉπ»π
Gothic
Etymology
From Proto-Germanic *katilaz, usually considered to come from Latin catillus.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /Λka.tils/
Noun
πΊπ°ππΉπ»π β’ (katils) m
- kettle
- 4th century β Ulfilas β Bible (Gospel of Mark β
¦:4)
- π³π°πΏππ΄πΉπ½πΉπ½π πππΉπΊπ»π΄ πΎπ°π· π°πΏππΊπΎπ΄ πΎπ°π· πΊπ°ππΉπ»π΄ πΎπ°π· π»πΉπ²ππ΄
- daupeinins stiklΔ jah aurkjΔ jah katilΔ jah ligrΔ
- as the washing of cups, and pots, brasen vessels, and of tables
- 4th century β Ulfilas β Bible (Gospel of Mark β
¦:4)
Declension
Only the genitive plural is attested. Given that this word is a loan from Latin, it may have been an i-stem instead, or perhaps an irregular u-stem like π°π²π²πΉπ»πΏπ (aggilus)
Masculine a-stem | ||
---|---|---|
Singular | Plural | |
Nominative | πΊπ°ππΉπ»π katils |
πΊπ°ππΉπ»ππ katilΕs |
Vocative | πΊπ°ππΉπ» katil |
πΊπ°ππΉπ»ππ katilΕs |
Accusative | πΊπ°ππΉπ» katil |
πΊπ°ππΉπ»π°π½π katilans |
Genitive | πΊπ°ππΉπ»πΉπ katilis |
πΊπ°ππΉπ»π΄ katilΔ |
Dative | πΊπ°ππΉπ»π° katila |
πΊπ°ππΉπ»π°πΌ katilam |
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