Вѧцеславе
Old Novgorodian
Etymology
Inherited from Proto-Slavic *Vęťeslàvъ. Cognate with Old East Slavic Вѧчеславъ (Vęčeslavŭ), Belarusian Вячасла́ў (Vjačasláw), Ukrainian В'ячесла́в (Vʺjačesláv), Russian Вячесла́в (Vjačesláv).
Proper noun
Вѧцеславе • (Vęcʹjeslave) m (diminutive Вѧцько)
- a male given name, equivalent to English Wenceslaus
Declension
| singular | dual | plural | |
|---|---|---|---|
| nominative | Вѧцеславе Vęcʹjeslave |
Вѧцеслава Vęcʹjeslava |
Вѧцеславѣ Vęcʹjeslavě |
| genitive | Вѧцеслава Vęcʹjeslava |
Вѧцеславоу Vęcʹjeslavu |
Вѧцеславъ Vęcʹjeslavŭ |
| dative | Вѧцеславоу Vęcʹjeslavu |
Вѧцеславома Vęcʹjeslavoma |
Вѧцеславомъ Vęcʹjeslavomŭ |
| accusative | Вѧцеславъ Vęcʹjeslavŭ |
Вѧцеслава Vęcʹjeslava |
Вѧцеславѣ Vęcʹjeslavě |
| instrumental | Вѧцеславъмь Vęcʹjeslavŭmĭ |
Вѧцеславома Vęcʹjeslavoma |
Вѧцеславꙑ Vęcʹjeslavy |
| locative | Вѧцеславѣ Vęcʹjeslavě |
Вѧцеславоу Vęcʹjeslavu |
Вѧцеславѣхъ Vęcʹjeslavěxŭ |
| vocative | Вѧцеславе Vęcʹjeslave |
Вѧцеслава Vęcʹjeslava |
Вѧцеславѣ Vęcʹjeslavě |
Further reading
- “вѧцьслава (letter no. 510), c. 1220‒1240”, in Древнерусские берестяные грамоты [Birchbark Literacy from Medieval Rus][1][2] (in Russian), http://gramoty.ru, 2007–2025