हिर
Sanskrit
Etymology
From Proto-Indo-European *ǵʰer- (“string, guts”). Cognate with Ancient Greek χορδή (khordḗ, “string, guts”) (English chord), Latin hernia, Old English ġearn (English yarn).
Noun
हिर • (hira) m
Declension
| Masculine a-stem declension of हिर | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Nom. sg. | हिरः (hiraḥ) | ||
| Gen. sg. | हिरस्य (hirasya) | ||
| Singular | Dual | Plural | |
| Nominative | हिरः (hiraḥ) | हिरौ (hirau) | हिराः (hirāḥ) |
| Vocative | हिर (hira) | हिरौ (hirau) | हिराः (hirāḥ) |
| Accusative | हिरम् (hiram) | हिरौ (hirau) | हिरान् (hirān) |
| Instrumental | हिरेन (hirena) | हिराभ्याम् (hirābhyām) | हिरैः (hiraiḥ) |
| Dative | हिराय (hirāya) | हिराभ्याम् (hirābhyām) | हिरेभ्यः (hirebhyaḥ) |
| Ablative | हिरात् (hirāt) | हिराभ्याम् (hirābhyām) | हिरेभ्यः (hirebhyaḥ) |
| Genitive | हिरस्य (hirasya) | हिरयोः (hirayoḥ) | हिरानाम् (hirānām) |
| Locative | हिरे (hire) | हिरयोः (hirayoḥ) | हिरेषु (hireṣu) |
This article is issued from
Wiktionary.
The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike.
Additional terms may apply for the media files.