mudā
Livonian
Etymology
From Proto-Finnic *muta.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /ˈmudɑː/, [ˈmud̪ɑː]
Noun
mudā
Declension
| singular (ikšlu’g) | plural (pǟgiņlu’g) | |
|---|---|---|
| nominative (nominatīv) | mudā | mudād |
| genitive (genitīv) | mudā | mudād |
| partitive (partitīv) | mu’ddõ | mudīdi |
| dative (datīv) | mudān | mudādõn |
| instrumental (instrumentāl) | mudāks | mudādõks |
| illative (illatīv) | mu’ddõ | mudīž |
| inessive (inesīv) | mudās | mudīs |
| elative (elatīv) | mudāst | mudīst |
References
- Tiit-Rein Viitso; Valts Ernštreits (2012–2013), “mudā”, in Līvõkīel-ēstikīel-lețkīel sõnārōntõz [Livonian-Estonian-Latvian Dictionary][1] (in Estonian and Latvian), Tartu, Rīga: Tartu Ülikool, Latviešu valodas aģentūra
Pali
Alternative forms
Alternative scripts
- 𑀫𑀼𑀤𑀸 (Brahmi script)
- मुदा (Devanagari script)
- মুদা (Bengali script)
- මුදා (Sinhalese script)
- မုဒါ or မုၻႃ (Burmese script)
- มุทา (Thai script)
- ᨾᩩᨴᩤ (Tai Tham script)
- ມຸທາ (Lao script)
- មុទា (Khmer script)
- 𑄟𑄪𑄘𑄂 (Chakma script)
Noun
mudā f