друид
Russian
Etymology
Borrowed from English druid, French druide, from Old French, via Latin Druidae, from Gaulish *druwits, from Proto-Celtic *druwits (literally either “oak-knower” or “firm knower, great sage”), from either Proto-Indo-European *dóru (“tree”) or *drew- (“solid, firm, hard”) and *weyd- (“to see, to have knowledge”).
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): [drʊˈit]
Noun
друи́д • (druíd) m inan (genitive друи́да, nominative plural друи́ды, genitive plural друи́дов)
Declension
Declension of друи́д (inan masc-form hard-stem accent-a)
| singular | plural | |
|---|---|---|
| nominative | друи́д druíd |
друи́ды druídy |
| genitive | друи́да druída |
друи́дов druídov |
| dative | друи́ду druídu |
друи́дам druídam |
| accusative | друи́д druíd |
друи́ды druídy |
| instrumental | друи́дом druídom |
друи́дами druídami |
| prepositional | друи́де druíde |
друи́дах druídax |