Northern Mansi
Etymology
From Proto-Uralic *pojka (“son, boy”). Cognates include Northern Khanty пох (poh), Hungarian fiú, Finnish poika.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): [ˈpɪɣ]
- Hyphenation: пыг
- Rhymes: -ɪɣ
Noun
пыг (pyg) (Sosva, Sygva)
- son
- young man
Declension
Inflection of пыг (pyg)
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singular
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dual
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plural
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nominative
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пыг (pyg)
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пыгыг (pygyg)
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пыгыт (pygyt)
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locative
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пыгт (pygt)
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пыгыгт (pygygt)
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пыгытт (pygytt)
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lative
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пыгн (pygn)
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пыгыгн (pygygn)
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пыгытн (pygytn)
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ablative
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пыгныл (pygnyl)
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пыгыгныл (pygygnyl)
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пыгытныл (pygytnyl)
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instrumental
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пыгыл (pygyl)
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пыгыгныл (pygygnyl)
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пыгытыл (pygytyl)
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translative
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пыгыг (pygyg)
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――
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――
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Possessive forms of пыг (pyg)
possessor
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single possession
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double possession
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multiple possession
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1st person sing.
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пыгум (pygum)
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пыгагум (pygagum)
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пыганум (pyganum)
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2rd person sing.
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пыгын (pygyn)
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пыгагын (pygagyn)
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пыган (pygan)
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3rd person sing.
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пыге (pyge)
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пыгаге (pygage)
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пыганэ (pyganè)
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1st person dual
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пыгме̄н (pygmēn)
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пыгагаме̄н (pygagamēn)
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пыганаме̄н (pyganamēn)
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2rd person dual
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пыгы̄н (pygȳn)
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пыгагы̄н (pygagȳn)
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пыганы̄н (pyganȳn)
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3rd person dual
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пыге̄ (pygē)
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пыгаге̄н (pygagēn)
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пыганэ̄н (pyganè̄n)
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1st person plural
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пыгув (pyguv)
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пыгагув (pygaguv)
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пыганув (pyganuv)
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2rd person plural
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пыгы̄н (pygȳn)
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пыгагы̄н (pygagȳn)
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пыганы̄н (pyganȳn)
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3rd person plural
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пыганыл (pyganyl)
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пыгага̄ныл (pygagānyl)
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пыга̄ныл (pygānyl)
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References
- Afanasʹjeva, K. V., Sobjanina, S. A. (2012) “пыг”, in Školʹnyj mansijsko-russkij slovarʹ [Mansi-Russian school dictionary], Khanty-Mansiysk: RIO IRO
- Elena Skribnik, editor (2016), Ob-Ugric Database: analysed text corpora and dictionaries for less described Ob-Ugric dialects[1], University of Munich
- Entry #785 in Uralonet, online Uralic etymological database of the Hungarian Research Centre for Linguistics.
- “пыг”, in Northern Mansi-Hungarian dictionary, Tromsø: University of Tromsø, 2023