овёс
See also: овес
Chechen
Etymology
Borrowed from Russian овёс (ovjós).
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /ˈovjos/
Noun
овёс • (ovjos) class j
Declension
This entry needs an inflection-table template.
References
- Matsiev, Akhmat G. (1961) Чеченско-русский словарь / Нохчийн-оьрсийн словарь [Chechen-Russian dictionary] (in Russian), Moscow: State Publishing House of Foreign and Ethnicity Dictionaries, page 311
Russian
Alternative forms
- овёсъ (ovjós) — Pre-reform orthography (1918)
Etymology
Inherited from Proto-Slavic *ovьsъ, which is a cognate with Latin avena.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): [ɐˈvʲɵs]
Audio: (file)
Noun
овёс • (ovjós) m inan (genitive овса́, nominative plural овсы́, genitive plural овсо́в, relational adjective овся́ный)
- oats
- 1912, Иван Бунин [Ivan Bunin], Жертва; English translation from Elijah, the Prophet, 1916:
- Мя́гкий ве́тер, ду́вший со всех сторо́н, иногда́ уси́ливался, поры́висто бежа́л по ржам и овса́м — и они́ су́хо, трево́жно шелесте́ли.
- Mjáxkij véter, dúvšij so vsex storón, inogdá usílivalsja, porývisto bežál po ržam i ovsám — i oní súxo, trevóžno šelestéli.
- Soft winds, blowing from every side, at times became stronger and ran in rapid gusts through stalks of rye and oats, which fluttered dryly and restlessly.