vitt
Estonian
Etymology
From North Germanic. Compare Swedish fitta and Old Norse fytta. Cognate to Finnish vittu, Livonian viţ, Votic vittu, and Ingrian vittu.
Noun
vitt (genitive vitu, partitive vittu)
Declension
Declension of vitt (type riik)
| singular | plural | |
|---|---|---|
| nominative | vitt | vitud |
| genitive | vitu | vittude |
| partitive | vittu | vitte / vittusid |
| illative | vittu / vitusse | vittudesse |
| inessive | vitus | vittudes |
| elative | vitust | vittudest |
| allative | vitule | vittudele |
| adessive | vitul | vittudel |
| ablative | vitult | vittudelt |
| translative | vituks | vittudeks |
| terminative | vituni | vittudeni |
| essive | vituna | vittudena |
| abessive | vituta | vittudeta |
| comitative | vituga | vittudega |
Synonyms
- puts
- tuss
References
Hungarian
Etymology
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): [ˈvitː]
Verb
vitt
- third-person singular indicative past indefinite of visz
- Két bőröndöt vitt. - He/she carried two suitcases.
- past participle of visz
Skolt Sami
Etymology
From Proto-Samic *vittë, from Proto-Uralic *witte.
Numeral
vitt
Further reading
Swedish
Adjective
vitt
Adverb
vitt (not comparable)
Phrases
- vitt och brett
Noun
vitt n
- the color white
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