сым

Kazakh

Cyrillic сым (sym)
Arabic سىم
Latin

Etymology

From Persian سیم (sim, wire), from Ancient Greek ἄσημον (ásēmon, silverware), neuter form of ἄσημος (ásēmos, pure, unmarked).

Noun

сым (sym)

  1. wire

Declension

Mansi

Etymology

From Proto-Mansi *šim, from Proto-Uralic *śüdäme. Cognate with Hungarian szív, Finnish sydän.

  • Southern Mansi; šäm (Janyčkova Village), šåm, šøm [1]
  • Eastern Mansi; šim (Lower Konda), sem (Kondinsky)
  • Western Mansi; šim (Lozva Middle, Lozva Lower), ši̮m (Pelym)
  • Northern Mansi; sim (Sosva)

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): [sim]

Noun

сым (sim)

  1. heart

References

  1. SIPŐCZ, Katalin. (2005). SPATIAL ORIENTATION AND GRAMMATICALIZATION. Acta Linguistica Hungarica, 52(4), 411-425. http://www.jstor.org/stable/26190083
  • Afanasʹjeva, K. V.; Sobjanina, S. A. (2012), сым”, in Školʹnyj mansijsko-russkij slovarʹ) [Mansi-Russian school dictionary], Khanty-Mansiysk: RIO IRO
  • Elena Skribnik, editor (2016) Ob-Ugric Database: analysed text corpora and dictionaries for less described Ob-Ugric dialects, University of Munich
  • Entry #960 in Uralonet, online Uralic etymological database of the Research Institute for Linguistics, Hungary.
This article is issued from Wiktionary. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.