китъ
Old Church Slavonic
Etymology
Borrowed from Ancient Greek κῆτος (kêtos).
Noun
к҄итъ • (kʹitŭ) m
Descendants
- Bulgarian: кит (kit)
- Macedonian: кит (kit)
- → Old East Slavic: китъ (kitŭ), кꙑтъ (kytŭ)
- Old Ruthenian: китъ (kit), кытъ (kyt), кітъ (kit), кѵтъ (kit)
- Russian: кит (kit), китъ (kit) — Pre-reform orthography (1918)
- → Romanian: chit
- → Serbo-Croatian:
- → Slovene: kit
- → Uyghur: كىت (kit)
Old Ruthenian
Alternative forms
- кытъ (kyt), кітъ (kit), кѵтъ (kit)
Etymology
Inherited from Old East Slavic китъ (kitŭ), кꙑтъ (kytŭ), further borrowed from Old Church Slavonic к҄итъ (kʹitŭ), in turn borrowed from Ancient Greek κῆτος (kêtos). Cognate with Russian кит (kit).
Noun
китъ • (kit) m animal (genitive кита, nominative plural киты, genitive plural китовъ, related adjective китовъ)
Descendants
Further reading
- Voitiv, H. V., editor (2008), “китъ, кітъ, кытъ”, in Словник української мови XVI – 1-ї пол. XVII ст. [Dictionary of the Ukrainian Language of 16ᵗʰ – 1ˢᵗ half of 17ᵗʰ c.] (in Ukrainian), numbers 14 (к – конъюрация), Lviv: KIUS, →ISBN, page 104
- The template Template:R:zle-mbe:HSBM does not use the parameter(s):
url=kit
Please see Module:checkparams for help with this warning.Bulyka, A. M., editor (1996), “китъ”, in Гістарычны слоўнік беларускай мовы [Historical Dictionary of the Belarusian Language] (in Belarusian), numbers 15 (катъ – коречный), Minsk: Belaruskaia navuka, →ISBN, page 96
Russian
Noun
китъ • (kit) m anim (genitive кита́, nominative plural киты́, genitive plural кито́въ)
- Pre-1918 spelling of кит (kit).