šógun
Czech
Etymology
From Japanese 将軍 (shōgun), from an abbreviation of 征夷大将軍 (Seii Taishogun, “General who overcomes the barbarians”), from Middle Chinese 將軍 (tsjàng-kjun, “leader of troops, general”).
Noun
šógun m
- shogun (the supreme commander of the armed forces of feudal Japan)
Slovak
Etymology
From Japanese 将軍 (shōgun), from an abbreviation of 征夷大将軍 (Seii Taishogun, “General who overcomes the barbarians”), from Middle Chinese 將軍 (tsjàng-kjun, “leader of troops, general”).
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /ˈʃɔːɡun/
Noun
šógun m (genitive singular šóguna, nominative plural šóguni, genitive plural šógunov, declension pattern of chlap)
- shogun (the supreme commander of the armed forces of feudal Japan)
Declension
Declension of šógun
| singular | plural | |
|---|---|---|
| nominative | šógun | šóguni |
| genitive | šóguna | šógunov |
| dative | šógunovi | šógunom |
| accusative | šóguna | šógunov |
| locative | šógunovi | šógunoch |
| instrumental | šógunom | šógunmi |
Derived terms
- šógunský
References
- šógun in Slovak dictionaries at korpus.sk
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