канцлер

Belarusian

Etymology

Borrowed from German Kanzler, from Late Latin cancellarius.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): [ˈkanʲt͡sʲlʲer]
  • Rhymes: -anʲt͡sʲlʲer
  • Hyphenation: кан‧цлер

Noun

ка́нцлер • (káncljerm pers (genitive ка́нцлера, nominative plural ка́нцлеры, genitive plural ка́нцлераў, relational adjective ка́нцлерскі)

  1. chancellor (title of various high-ranking politicians or academic officials, including heads of government in Germany and Austria)

Declension

References

  • канцлер”, in Skarnik's Belarusian dictionary (in Belarusian), based on Kandrat Krapiva's Explanatory Dictionary of the Belarusian Language (1977-1984)
  • канцлер” in Belarusian–Russian dictionaries and Belarusian dictionaries at slounik.org

Kazakh

Alternative scripts
Arabic كانتسلەر
Cyrillic канцлер
Latin kantsler

Etymology

Borrowed from Russian ка́нцлер (káncler), from German Kanzler, from Late Latin cancellarius.

Noun

канцлер • (kansler)

  1. chancellor (head of parliamentary government in some German-speaking countries)

Declension

Declension of канцлер
singular plural
nominative канцлер (kansler) канцлерлер (kanslerler)
genitive канцлердің (kanslerdıñ) канцлерлердің (kanslerlerdıñ)
dative канцлерге (kanslerge) канцлерлерге (kanslerlerge)
accusative канцлерді (kanslerdı) канцлерлерді (kanslerlerdı)
locative канцлерде (kanslerde) канцлерлерде (kanslerlerde)
ablative канцлерден (kanslerden) канцлерлерден (kanslerlerden)
instrumental канцлермен (kanslermen) канцлерлермен (kanslerlermen)

Russian

Alternative forms

Etymology

Borrowed from German Kanzler, from Late Latin cancellarius.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): [ˈkant͡slʲɪr]
  • Audio:(file)

Noun

ка́нцлер • (kánclerm anim (genitive ка́нцлера, nominative plural ка́нцлеры, genitive plural ка́нцлеров, feminine ка́нцлерша)

  1. chancellor (title of various high-ranking politicians or academic officials, including heads of government in Germany and Austria)

Usage notes

  • Grammatically the word is a masculine, but it is used to refer to both a man and a woman and it is declinable in both cases. The term ка́нцлерша f (kánclerša) is also used for a woman in colloquial Russian, but it is nonstandard.

Declension

Descendants

  • Yakut: канцлер (kantsler)

Ukrainian

Etymology

Borrowed from German Kanzler, from Late Latin cancellarius.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): [ˈkant͡sɫer]
  • Audio:(file)

Noun

ка́нцлер • (kánclerm pers (genitive ка́нцлера, nominative plural ка́нцлери, genitive plural ка́нцлерів, female equivalent ка́нцлерка, relational adjective ка́нцлерський)

  1. chancellor (title of various high-ranking politicians or academic officials, including heads of government in Germany and Austria)

Usage notes

  • The feminine form "канцлерка" is considered too colloquial and the masculine form "канцлер" is used for both male and female chancellors.

Declension

Declension of ка́нцлер
(pers hard masc-form accent-a)
singular plural
nominative ка́нцлер
káncler
ка́нцлери
kánclery
genitive ка́нцлера
kánclera
ка́нцлерів
káncleriv
dative ка́нцлерові, ка́нцлеру
kánclerovi, káncleru
ка́нцлерам
káncleram
accusative ка́нцлера
kánclera
ка́нцлерів
káncleriv
instrumental ка́нцлером
kánclerom
ка́нцлерами
káncleramy
locative ка́нцлерові, ка́нцлері
kánclerovi, káncleri
ка́нцлерах
kánclerax
vocative ка́нцлере
kánclere
ка́нцлери
kánclery

Derived terms

Further reading

Yakut

Etymology

Borrowed from Russian канцлер (kancler), and related to English chancellor.

Noun

канцлер • (kantsler)

  1. chancellor

See also