шатать

Russian

Etymology

From Old East Slavic шатати (šatati), from Proto-Slavic *šętati. Cognate with Old Church Slavonic шѩтаниѥ (šjętanije), Ukrainian шата́тися (šatátysja, to sway, to stagger), Bulgarian ше́там (šétam, to go back and forth, to manage, to serve), Serbo-Croatian ше́тати (to walk) (1sg. ше̑та̄м or ше̑ће̄м), Slovene šétati se (to walk), Czech šátat (to move).

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): [ʂɐˈtatʲ]
  • IPA(key): [ʂɨˈtatʲ] (phonetic respelling: шета́ть)

Verb

шата́ть (šatátʹ) impf (perfective зашата́ть or шатну́ть)

  1. to sway, to rock, to shake
    Брат на это кивал и ухмылялся, шатая ногою легкий тазик
    Brat na eto kival i uxmyljalsja, šataja nogoju lexkij tazik
    My brother beckoned and grinned at it, swaying with his foot the tranquil basin
  2. (impersonal) to stagger, to reel

Conjugation

Derived terms

imperfective

perfective

  • (no equivalent)
  • шатну́ть (šatnútʹ)
  • шатну́ться (šatnútʹsja)
  • дошата́ться (došatátʹsja)
  • зашата́ть (zašatátʹ)
  • зашата́ться (zašatátʹsja)
  • нашата́ться (našatátʹsja)
  • отшатну́ть (otšatnútʹ)
  • отшатну́ться (otšatnútʹsja)
  • пошата́ть (pošatátʹ)
  • пошатну́ть (pošatnútʹ)
  • пошатну́ться (pošatnútʹsja)
  • (no equivalent)
  • (no equivalent)
  • расшата́ть (rasšatátʹ)
  • расшата́ться (rasšatátʹsja)

References

  • Vasmer, Max (1964–1973), шатать”, in Etimologičeskij slovarʹ russkovo jazyka [Etymological Dictionary of the Russian Language] (in Russian), translated from German and supplemented by Trubačev O. N., Moscow: Progress
This article is issued from Wiktionary. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.