kārts
Latvian
Etymology 1
According to the most widespread view, kārts is a nominal form of the stem of the verb kārt “to hang” (q.v.), in which case its original meaning was “hanging (piece of wood),” or maybe “piece of wood from which something hangs.” Another hypothesis derives kārts from the same stem as cirst “to chop wood,” i.e. Proto-Baltic *kart-, *kirt-, from Proto-Indo-European *ker- “to cut” with an extra -t, in which case the original meaning would have been “cut, chopped (piece of wood).” Note, however, that the latter hypothesis does not explain the level tone in kārsts (cirst has falling tone), whereas the former does (kārt, like kārts, has level tone). Cognates include Lithuanian kártis, Old Prussian kartans.[1]
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): [kāːɾts]
(file) |
Noun
kārts f (6th declension)
- pole, post (long, thin piece of wood, usually for supporting something)
- nomizota kārts ― debarked pole
- cirst kārtis ― to cut poles
- sasliet kārtis ― to raise poles
- kāršu žogs ― pole fence
- karoga kārts ― flagpole
- garš kā kārts ― tall as a pole (a tall, thin person)
- Juris pagalmā ieraudzīja Ellu, kas vilka metrus divus, divarpus garu kārti ― in the courtyard Juris saw Ella dragging a two-, two-and-a-half-meter long pole
- viņš staigā pa dārzu, gar ēkām, gar dīķi... pāris reizes ar kārti to mērīja ― he walked by the garden, along the buildings, the pond... a couple of times he measured it with a pole
- (sports, athletics) pole used in pole vault competitions
- tagad, izrādās, vairs nepietiek tikai ar kārts atbilstību sportista augumam un svaram ― now, it turns out, the support of the pole is no longer enough for the height and weight of the athlete...
Declension
Synonyms
- līksts
Etymology 2
Borrowed from German Karte (with level-tone lengthening: āɾ > āːɾ), itself borrowed from French carte. The term is first mentioned in 17th-century dictionaries as a plural 5th-declension noun (kārtes); the current 6th-declension form is first attested in the 1870s, perhaps as a result of the influence of kārts “pole” (see above), which was already a 6th-declension stem; cf. karte, also borrowed from German Karte, but not influenced by kārts “pole.”[2]
Alternative forms
- (obsolete form) kārte
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): [kāːɾts]
(file) |
Noun
kārts f (6th declension)
- card, playing card (one of usually 52 rectangular pieces of hard paper or cardboard with drawings, used to play various games)
- kāršu komplekts ― deck of cards
- kāršu vērtība ― the value of the cards
- kāršu spēle ― card game
- dalīt kārtis ― to give (lit. distribute) the cards
- kāršu suga ― card suit
- Nikurs paņēma savu kārti... tas bija pīķa kalps ― Nikurs took his card... it was the jack of spades
- cards, card game (a game which uses these cards)
- kāršu partija ― a game of cards
- spēlēt kārtis ― to play cards
- kungi sēdās pie kāršu galda ― the gentlemen sat down at the card table
- lielajā namā pirms revolūcijas pulcējās muižnieku aristokrātija, notriecot lauku kārtīs, uzdzīvē un tukšās diskusijās ― before the revolution, the landowner aristocracy got together in the big house, killing time in (= with) cards, merry-making and empty discussions
Declension
Synonyms
See also
Suits in Latvian · sugas (see also: kārts, spēļu kārts) (layout · text) | |||
---|---|---|---|
sirdis | kāravi | pīķi | krusti, kreiči |
References
- Karulis, Konstantīns (1992) “kārtsa”, in Latviešu Etimoloģijas Vārdnīca (in Latvian), Rīga: AVOTS, →ISBN
- Karulis, Konstantīns (1992) “kārtsb”, in Latviešu Etimoloģijas Vārdnīca (in Latvian), Rīga: AVOTS, →ISBN