канцлер

Kazakh

Cyrillic канцлер (kansler)
Arabic كانتسلەر
Latin

Etymology

Borrowed from Russian ка́нцлер (káncler), from German Kanzler, from Late Latin cancellarius.

Noun

канцлер (kansler)

  1. chancellor (head of parliamentary government in some German speaking countries)

Declension

Russian

Etymology

Borrowed from German Kanzler, from Late Latin cancellarius.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): [ˈkant͡slʲɪr]

Noun

ка́нцлер (káncler) m anim (genitive ка́нцлера, nominative plural ка́нцлеры, genitive plural ка́нцлеров, feminine ка́нцлерша)

  1. chancellor (title of various high-ranking politicians or academic officials, including heads of government in Germany and Austria)

Usage notes

  • The feminine form "канцлерша" is considered too colloquial and the masculine form "канцлер" is used for both male and female chancellors.

Declension

Derived terms

Descendants

  • Yakut: канцлер (kantsler)

Ukrainian

Etymology

Borrowed from German Kanzler, from Late Latin cancellarius.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): [ˈkant͡sɫer]
  • (file)

Noun

ка́нцлер (káncler) m pers (genitive ка́нцлера, nominative plural ка́нцлери, genitive plural ка́нцлерів, feminine ка́нцлерка, related adjective ка́нцлерський)

  1. chancellor (title of various high-ranking politicians or academic officials, including heads of government in Germany and Austria)

Usage notes

  • The feminine form "канцлерка" is considered too colloquial and the masculine form "канцлер" is used for both male and female chancellors.

Declension

Derived terms

Further reading

Yakut

Etymology

Borrowed from Russian канцлер (kancler), and related to English chancellor.

Noun

канцлер (kantsler)

  1. chancellor

See also

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