drť
Czech
Etymology
From Old Czech drt (“crushed material”),[1] from Proto-Slavic *dьrati, from Proto-Indo-European *der-.[2] See also the verb drát.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): [ˈdr̩c]
- Rhymes: -r̩c
Noun
drť f
- disintegrated or crushed material, for example grit [since 15th c.]
- 1869, Filip Stanislav Kodym, Úvod do hospodářství: hospodářská čítanka, Praha: Mikuláš & Knapp, page 8–9:
- Mezi tím co jemná mrť se tvořila, nezůstala ovšem ve spod skála na pokoji. Pukřila pomalu, rozpadajíc se v drobty a prach či jedním slovem, v drť.
- While fine soil was being created, the rock underneath did not stay still. It was decaying slowly, being disintegrated into crumbs and dust or, in one word, grit.
- Mezi tím co jemná mrť se tvořila, nezůstala ovšem ve spod skála na pokoji. Pukřila pomalu, rozpadajíc se v drobty a prach či jedním slovem, v drť.
-
Declension
Declension
| singular | plural | |
|---|---|---|
| nominative | drť | drtě, drti |
| genitive | drti | drtí |
| dative | drti | drtím |
| accusative | drť | drtě, drti |
| vocative | drti | drtě, drti |
| locative | drti | drtích |
| instrumental | drtí | drtěmi |
Related terms
References
Further reading
Verb
drť
- second-person singular imperative of drtit
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