вес
Bulgarian
    
    Etymology
    
From Proto-Slavic *vьsь (“settlement”). Akin to Bulgarian вила (vila, “villa”) (of Latin origin) and further to archaic English wick (“dwelling”) (found in Gatwick, Reykjavík, etc.). Possibly also related to the ethnonym ви́кинг (víking, “viking”), which is the origin of Bulgarian ви́тег (víteg), ви́тез (vítez, “hero, knight”).
Pronunciation
    
- IPA(key): [vɛs]
Noun
    
вес • (ves) m
Usage notes
    
Used until the Ottoman conquest to denote temporary or isolated settlements that lacked the infrastructure to be qualified as full-fledged villages. After the Ottoman conquest, such settlements became known as махала́ (mahalá) - a term used as an administrative unit until the 1980's.
Declension
    
Derived terms
    
References
    
- вьсь in Исторически речник на Българския език, Sofia University "St. Clement Ohridsky"
- Georgiev V. I., editor (1971), “*вес”, in Български етимологичен речник [Bulgarian Etymological Dictionary] (in Bulgarian), volume 1, Sofia: Bulgarian Academy of Sciences, page 136
Nivkh
    
    
Russian
    
    Alternative forms
    
- вѣсъ (věs) – Pre-reform orthography (1918)
Pronunciation
    
- IPA(key): [vʲes]
- Audio - (file) 
- Rhymes: -es
Etymology 1
    
Inherited from Proto-Slavic *věsъ. Related to ве́сить (vésitʹ, “to weigh”) and висе́ть (visétʹ, “to hang”). For the semantic shift compare Latin pondus (“weight”) and Latin pendo (“to hang, to suspend, to weigh”).
Noun
    
вес • (ves) m inan (genitive ве́са, nominative plural веса́, genitive plural весо́в, related adjective весово́й)
Usage notes
    
- The Russian equivalent of "weightless" is either без ве́са or без ве́су.
Declension
    
Related terms
    
- весо́мость (vesómostʹ), весы́ (vesý)
- ве́ский (véskij), весо́мый (vesómyj), уве́систый (uvésistyj)
- ве́сить (vésitʹ), взве́шивать (vzvéšivatʹ)
- ве́ско (vésko), весо́мо (vesómo)
Noun
    
вес • (ves) m inan (genitive ве́са, uncountable)