титар
Ukrainian
Etymology
From Old East Slavic ктиторъ (ktitorŭ), from Ancient Greek κτίτωρ (ktítōr, “founder”), an incorrect spelling of κτήτωρ (ktḗtōr) influenced by κτίζω (ktízō, “I found, build, establish”). Cognates include Russian ти́тар (títar), кти́тор (ktítor, “church warden”)
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): [ˈtɪtɐr]
Noun
ти́тар • (týtar) m anim (genitive ти́таря, nominative plural ти́тарі)
Declension
Declension of ти́тар
| singular | plural | |
|---|---|---|
| nominative | ти́тар týtar |
ти́тарі týtari |
| genitive | ти́таря týtarja |
ти́тарів týtariv |
| dative | ти́тареві, ти́тарю týtarevi, týtarju |
ти́тарям týtarjam |
| accusative | ти́таря týtarja |
ти́тарів týtariv |
| instrumental | ти́тарем týtarem |
ти́тарями týtarjamy |
| locative | ти́тареві, ти́тарю, ти́тарі týtarevi, týtarju, týtari |
ти́тарях týtarjax |
| vocative | ти́тарю týtarju |
ти́тарі týtari |
See also
- Титаре́нко (Tytarénko, “Titarenko; a Ukrainian surname”)
- Титарёв (Titarjóv, “Titarev; a Russian surname”)
References
- Bilodid I. K., editor (1970–1980), “титар”, in Slovnyk ukrajinsʹkoji movy, Kiev: Naukova Dumka
This article is issued from
Wiktionary.
The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike.
Additional terms may apply for the media files.