баддя
Ukrainian
Etymology
Inherited from Old East Slavic бадия (badija), via Tatar бадъя (badʺya) from Persian بادیه (bâdye, “a capacious earthen vessel, in which wine is kept; a large deep jug, cup, bowl”), from Akkadian 𒁀𒋾𒌝 (baṭium, “vessel, basin, place to hold; tray, platter”), also found in Jewish Babylonian Aramaic בָּטִיתָא (bāṭīṯā), Classical Syriac ܒܳܛܺܝܬܴܐ (bāṭīṯā), Arabic بَاطِيَة (bāṭiya) and Ancient Greek βατιάκη (batiákē). Compare Russian бадья (badʹja).
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): [bɐˈdʲːa]
Noun
баддя́ • (baddjá) f inan (genitive бадді́, nominative plural бадді́, genitive plural баде́й) (rare)
Declension
| singular | plural | |
|---|---|---|
| nominative | баддя́ baddjá |
бадді́ baddí |
| genitive | бадді́ baddí |
баде́й badéj |
| dative | бадді́ baddí |
баддя́м baddjám |
| accusative | баддю́ baddjú |
бадді́ baddí |
| instrumental | бадде́ю baddéju |
баддя́ми baddjámy |
| locative | бадді́ baddí |
баддя́х baddjáx |
| vocative | бадде́ baddé |
бадді́ baddí |
References
- Vasmer, Max (1964–1973) “бадья”, in Oleg Trubachyov, transl., Этимологический словарь русского языка [Etymological Dictionary of the Russian Language] (in Russian), Moscow: Progress