krēsls
Latvian
Etymology
Some researchers consider this word borrowed from Slavic, where a possible Proto-Slavic *krěslo could be related to *krosno (“loom, weaving frame”), the rectangular form of which is reminiscent of chairs. Other researchers, pointing out that this would not explain the number of cognate formations in Baltic (e.g., dialectal Latvian kreslis (“removable sleigh backrest”), kreša (“little bench”), dialectal Lithuanian krãsė, kresė̃ (“chair”), krẽstas (“bench”)), suggest that the Slavic cognates are actually borrowings from Baltic. The latter hypothesis is supported by their distribution: there are no reflexes in Southern Slavic languages (the Bulgarian cognate is a later borrowing). If so, krēsls would come (via Proto-Baltic *krēs- with an extra l) from the same stem as the verb krest (“to shake”), older meaning “to braid, to weave” (for a link between the notions of “shaking” and “weaving,” see Old Norse hrista (“to shake”), Middle Low German risten (“to braid, to weave”)): Proto-Indo-European *kert-, *kret-, from *(s)ker- (“to turn, to bend”). The original meaning would then have been “woven object” (folk songs suggest that earlier chairs were indeed made by weaving wickers). Cognates include Lithuanian krė́slas (“chair; chair with backrest; armchair”), Old Prussian creslan (“chair with backrest”), Russian кре́сло (kréslo, “armchair”), Bulgarian кресло́ (kresló, “armchair”), Czech křeslo (“armchair”), Polish krzesło (“armchair”).[1]
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): [krǣːsls]
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Noun
krēsls m (1st declension)
- chair (piece of furniture for sitting, consisting of a backrest and a single seat mounted on several, usually four, feet)
- pīts krēsls ― wicker chair
- meldru krēsls ― rush, reed chair
- grozāmais krēsls ― swivel chair
- saliekamais krēsls ― folding chair
- atpūtas krēsls ― armchair (lit. resting chair)
- atzveltnes krēsls ― chair with a large backrest (lit. backrest chair)
- goda krēsls ― honor chair (where the honor guest will sit)
- stomatoloģiskais krēsls ― dentist's chair
- elektriskais krēsls ― electric chair (for executing criminals)
- bikts krēsls ― confession chair, confessional
- Svētais Krēsls ― Holy See (lit. Holy Chair, which the Pope sits on)
- māte atkrita krēslā un aizsedza vaigu ar priekšautu ― mother fell into the chair and hid her face in (her) apron
- Andrejs un Milda lēni atlaidās mīkstajos krēslos, lai gan sēdēt nemaz negribējās ― Andrejs and Milda slowly sat down on the soft (arm)chairs, though they did not feel at all like sitting
- (construction) a structure of beams that supports the rafters and the roof of a house; roof truss
- jumta krēsls ― roof chair (= truss)
Usage notes
Latviešu etimoloģijas vārdnīca indicates this term as having a level intonation. In practice, however, it is very commonly pronounced with a broken tone, this also allows to differentiate it from krēsla (“dusk, twilight”). Perhaps the switch in tone is by contamination with the Russian term кре́сло (kréslo, “armchair”) (although the Russian language doesn't have contrastive tones the typical way vowels are realized in Russian can be perceived by Latvian speakers as a universal broken tone.)
Declension
singular (vienskaitlis) | plural (daudzskaitlis) | |
---|---|---|
nominative (nominatīvs) | krēsls | krēsli |
accusative (akuzatīvs) | krēslu | krēslus |
genitive (ģenitīvs) | krēsla | krēslu |
dative (datīvs) | krēslam | krēsliem |
instrumental (instrumentālis) | krēslu | krēsliem |
locative (lokatīvs) | krēslā | krēslos |
vocative (vokatīvs) | krēsl | krēsli |
References
- Karulis, Konstantīns (1992) “krēsls”, in Latviešu Etimoloģijas Vārdnīca (in Latvian), Rīga: AVOTS, →ISBN