tēvs
Latvian
Etymology
From Proto-Baltic *tewas ("father"), from Proto-Indo-European *te- (“father”), a stem found in reduplicated form in tētis (“father”) (q.v.). The epenthetic v arose to break the e-a sequence. Cognates include Lithuanian tėvas, Old Prussian tāws, towis (“father”), thewis (“father's brother”).[1]
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): [tǣːws]
Noun
tēvs m (1st declension)
- father (a man who has a child or children)
- tēvs ar dēliem ― a father with (his) sons
- tēva pienākums ― father's duty, obligation
- tēva gādība ― father's care
- tas ir mans tēvs ― that is my father
- pie eglītes sēž arī pārējie ģimenes locekļi: tēvs, māte, vēcmāmiņa ― the remaining family members - father, mother, grandmother - are sitting by the pine (= Christmas) tree
- (Christianity) God the Father (God seen as the creator of the universe)
- Mūsu Tēvs, Tēvs Mūsu ― Our Father (prayer)
- debesu tēvs ― heavenly father
- Dievs Tēvs! Dievs Kungs! ― oh God! oh Lord! (expressions of surprise or fear)
- (Christianity) Father (used to address or to speak about members of the Catholic or Orthodox clergy: priests, monks, etc.)
- svētais tēvs ― holy father (the Catholic Pope's title)
- garīgais tēvs ― spiritual father (preacher, priest, etc.)
- baznīcas tēvi ― the fathers of the church (who formed the church's doctrive from the 2nd to the 8th century)
- pareizticīgo garīdznieks tēvs Andrejs, vēršoties pie krieviem, lūdza atbalstīt latviešus viņu cīņā par neatkarību ― the Orthodox priest Father Andrejs, turning to the Russians, asked (them) to support the Latvians in their struggle for independence
- (with a family or house name in the genitive) father; a respectful form of address for an older man, especially the leader of a household, farm, etc.
- drīz izsteidzās Olliņu tēvs pats ― soon (the) father (of the) Oliņš (family) himself hurried out
- vecais Rijkuris atnāca gausiem soļiem un apstājās Natei blakus vagas galā: “jā, to es saprotu”, viņš teica; “vai ne, Rijkuru tēv, tagad te augs!” ― the old Rijkuris came with slow steps and stood next to Nate at the end of the furrow: “yes, I understand that,” he said; “don't you, father (of the) Rijkuri, now it (= plant) will grow here!”
- (in the plural, of people) fathers, ancestors
- tēvu tēvi ― the fathers' fathers (= the ancestors)
- tēvu tēvu laiki ― the fathers' fathers' (= ancient) times
- tēvu zeme, tēvzeme ― fatherland
- (aiz)iet pie tēviem ― to go to the fathers (= to die)
- (figuratively) father, founder, creator
- Ādolfs Alunāns ir latviešu teātra tēvs ― Ādolfs Alunāns is the father of the Latvian theater
- (of animals) male (usually tēviņš)
- vilku tēvs ― wolf father, male wolf
- sloku tēvi ― woodock fathers, male woodcocks
- (of plants, their parts; in the genitive, used as an adjective) from which there is growth, which generates new growth
- tēva augs, tēvaugs ― growing (part of) plant
- tēva zieds ― growing (part of) flower
Usage notes
The word tēviņš, at first a diminutive and form of endearment (“daddy”), now means “male” (animal); the term of endearment for “father” is tētiņš (“daddy”), from tētis (“father”). Note that tētis already has more emotional overtones than the more neutral tēvs.
Declension
Declension of tēvs (1st declension)
Synonyms
- tētis, tētiņš
Antonyms
Derived terms
Related terms
References
- Karulis, Konstantīns (1992) “tēvs”, in Latviešu Etimoloģijas Vārdnīca (in Latvian), Rīga: AVOTS, →ISBN
- tēvs at tezaurs.lv
This article is issued from Wiktionary. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.