ехидна

Macedonian

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): [ɛˈxidna]

Noun

ехидна • (ehidnaf

  1. echidna

Declension

Declension of ехидна
singular plural
indefinite ехидна (ehidna) ехидни (ehidni)
definite unspecified ехидната (ehidnata) ехидните (ehidnite)
definite proximal ехиднава (ehidnava) ехидниве (ehidnive)
definite distal ехиднана (ehidnana) ехиднине (ehidnine)
vocative ехидно (ehidno) ехидни (ehidni)

Russian

Etymology

Inherited from Old East Slavic ехидьна (jexidĭna, venomous snake),[1] from Old Church Slavonic ѥхидьна (jexidĭna),[2] from Ancient Greek ἔχιδνα (ékhidna, viper, snake).[3]

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): [(j)ɪˈxʲidnə]
  • Audio (Saint Petersburg):(file)

Noun

ехи́дна • (jexídnaf anim (genitive ехи́дны, nominative plural ехи́дны, genitive plural ехи́дн)

  1. echidna (any of the four species of small spined monotremes)
  2. red-bellied black snake
  3. (colloquial, figurative) viper, snake

Declension

References

  1. ^ Avanesov, R. I., editor (1990), “ѥхидьна”, in Словарь древнерусского языка (XI–XIV вв.): в 10 т. [Dictionary of the Old Russian Language (11ᵗʰ–14ᵗʰ cc.): in 10 vols] (in Russian), volume 3 (добродѣтельно – изжечисѧ), Moscow: Russian Lang., →ISBN, page 224
  2. ^ Shansky, N. M., editor (1973), “ехидна”, in Этимологический словарь русского языка [Etymological Dictionary of the Russian Language] (in Russian), volume 1, number 5 (Д, Е, Ж), Moscow: Moscow University Press, page 267
  3. ^ Vasmer, Max (1964–1973), “ехидна”, in Oleg Trubachyov, transl., Этимологический словарь русского языка [Etymological Dictionary of the Russian Language] (in Russian), Moscow: Progress

Further reading