nūoŗkū

Livonian

Etymology

From nūoŗ (young) +‎ (moon). The usage of the adjective nūoŗ – perhaps by contamination with Latvian jauns, as Latvian lacks separate terms for "new" and "young." Compare Finnish uusikuu (new moon).

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /ˈnuːorʲˌkuː/, [ˈnuˑo̯rʲˌkuː]

Noun

nūoŗkū

  1. new moon

Declension

Declension of nūoŗkū (12)
singular (ikšlu’g) plural (pǟgiņlu’g)
nominative (nominatīv) nūoŗkū nūoŗkūd
genitive (genitīv) nūoŗkū nūoŗkūd
partitive (partitīv) nūoŗkūdõ nūoŗkūḑi
dative (datīv) nūoŗkūn nūoŗkūdõn
instrumental (instrumentāl) nūoŗkūkõks nūoŗkūdkõks
illative (illatīv) nūoŗkū’zõ nūoŗkū’ži
inessive (inesīv) nūoŗkūsõ nūoŗkūši
elative (elatīv) nūoŗkūstõ nūoŗkūšti

References

  • Tiit-Rein Viitso; Valts Ernštreits (2012–2013), “nūoŗkū”, in Līvõkīel-ēstikīel-lețkīel sõnārōntõz [Livonian-Estonian-Latvian Dictionary]‎[1] (in Estonian and Latvian), Tartu, Rīga: Tartu Ülikool, Latviešu valodas aģentūra