чоловік

Rusyn

Etymology

From Old East Slavic человѣкъ (čelověkŭ), from Proto-Slavic *čьlověkъ, *čelověkъ.

Noun

чоловік (čolovik)

  1. human, man, one, person[1]

Synonyms

  • (human, person): особа (osoba)
  • цибатый (cybatŷj)

References

  1. “Словник Русиньскый”, in (please provide the title of the work), accessed 15 December 2018, archived from the original on 2018-12-14

Ukrainian

Etymology

From Old East Slavic человѣкъ (čelověkŭ), from Proto-Slavic *čьlověkъ, *čelověkъ.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): [t͡ʃɔɫɔˈʋʲik]
  • (file)

Noun

чолові́к (čolovík) m pers (genitive чолові́ка, nominative plural чолові́ки, genitive plural чолові́ків, related adjective чолові́чий)

  1. man (male human)
  2. husband
  3. man, human

Usage notes

The term is a false friend to many Slavic cognates, including Russian: челове́к (čelovék) and Belarusian: чалаве́к (čalavjék), and its plural is regular. The senses "male human" and "husband" are specific to Ukrainian. The word люди́на (ljudýna) is a more common term for singular "human", "human being".

Declension

Synonyms

Antonyms

References

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