sū
See also: Appendix:Variations of "su"
Japanese
Romanization
sū
Laal
Noun
sū
Livonian
Etymology
From Proto-Finnic *suu, from Proto-Uralic *śuwe. Cognates include Estonian suu and Finnish suu.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /ˈsuː/, [ˈsuː]
Noun
sū
Declension
| singular (ikšlu’g) | plural (pǟgiņlu’g) | |
|---|---|---|
| nominative (nominatīv) | sū | sūd |
| genitive (genitīv) | sū | sūd |
| partitive (partitīv) | sūdõ | sūḑi |
| dative (datīv) | sūn | sūdõn |
| instrumental (instrumentāl) | sūkõks | sūdkõks |
| illative (illatīv) | sū’zõ | sū’ži |
| inessive (inesīv) | sūsõ | sūši |
| elative (elatīv) | sūstõ | sūšti |
References
- Tiit-Rein Viitso; Valts Ernštreits (2012–2013), “sū”, in Līvõkīel-ēstikīel-lețkīel sõnārōntõz [Livonian-Estonian-Latvian Dictionary][1] (in Estonian and Latvian), Tartu, Rīga: Tartu Ülikool, Latviešu valodas aģentūra
- Lauri Kettunen (1938), Livisches Wörterbuch mit grammatischer Einleitung, Helsinki, page 388
Mandarin
Romanization
- Hanyu Pinyin reading of 囌 / 苏
- Hanyu Pinyin reading of 櫯 / 𰘶
- Hanyu Pinyin reading of 甦 / 苏
- Hanyu Pinyin reading of 稣
- Hanyu Pinyin reading of 穌 / 稣
- Hanyu Pinyin reading of 窘
- Hanyu Pinyin reading of 苏
- Hanyu Pinyin reading of 蘇 / 苏
- Hanyu Pinyin reading of 蘓 / 苏
- Hanyu Pinyin reading of 酥
- Hanyu Pinyin reading of 疏
Pyu (Myanmar)
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /suː/
Numeral