алтар
Belarusian
Etymology
Inherited from Old Ruthenian олтарь (oltarʹ),[1] from Old Church Slavonic олътарь (olŭtarĭ), ultimately from Latin altāre. Cognate with Ukrainian ві́вта́р (vívtár).
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): [aɫˈtar]
- Rhymes: -ar
- Hyphenation: ал‧тар
Noun
алта́р • (altár) m inan (genitive алтара́, nominative plural алтары́, genitive plural алтаро́ў)
Declension
Declension of алта́р (inan hard masc-form accent-b)
| singular | plural | |
|---|---|---|
| nominative | алта́р altár |
алтары́ altarý |
| genitive | алтара́ altará |
алтаро́ў altaróŭ |
| dative | алтару́ altarú |
алтара́м altarám |
| accusative | алта́р altár |
алтары́ altarý |
| instrumental | алтаро́м altaróm |
алтара́мі altarámi |
| locative | алтары́ altarý |
алтара́х altaráx |
| count form | — | алтары́1 altarý1 |
1Used with the numbers 2, 3, 4 and higher numbers after 20 ending in 2, 3, and 4.
References
- ^ Zhurawski, A. I., editor (1982), “алтарь, олтарь, олтаръ”, in Гістарычны слоўнік беларускай мовы [Historical Dictionary of the Belarusian Language] (in Belarusian), numbers 1 (а – биенье), Minsk: Navuka i tekhnika, page 103
Further reading
- “алтар” in Belarusian–Russian dictionaries and Belarusian dictionaries at slounik.org