cuś
Lower Sorbian
Alternative forms
- zusch (obsolete)
Etymology
Cognate with Upper Sorbian čuć (“to feel”), Polish czuć (“to feel”), Russian чуять (čujatʹ, “to smell, feel”).
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): [tsuɕ]
Verb
cuś impf
- to feel (sense by touch; experience an emotion or other mental state about)
- to smell (sense with the nose)
Conjugation
Conjugation of cuś (imperfective)
| Present | Singular | Dual | Plural |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1st person | cuju cujom |
cujomej | cujomy |
| 2nd person | cujoš | cujotej | cujośo |
| 3rd person | cujo | cujotej | cuju |
| Preterite | Singular | Dual | Plural |
| 1st person | cujach | cujachmej | cujachmy |
| 2nd person | cujašo | cujaštej | cujašćo |
| 3rd person | cujašo | cujaštej | cujachu |
| Imperative | Singular | Dual | Plural |
| 2nd person | cuj | cujtej | cujśo |
- Participles
- Present: cujucy
- Past active (“ł-form”): cuł
- Past passive: cuty
- Infinitive
- cuś
- Supine
- cut
- Verbal noun
- cuśe
Derived terms
- cujabny (“sensitive”)
- cujawa f (“sense of smell”)
- wucuś pf (“to feel, smell; tolerate, like”)
- zacuś pf (“to feel, smell, taste”)
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