целовѣке
Old Novgorodian
Alternative forms
- цоловѣке (ćolověke)
Etymology
Inherited from Proto-Slavic *čelověkъ. First attested in c. 1260‒1280.
Cognate with Old East Slavic человѣкъ (čelověkŭ), Old Church Slavonic чловѣкъ (člověkŭ), Old Polish człowiek.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /t͡sʲɛlɔˈʋeːkɛ/→/t͡sʲɛlɔˈʋʲeːkɛ/→/t͡sʲɛlɔˈʋʲeːkɛ/
- Hyphenation: це‧ло‧вѣ‧ке
Noun
целовѣке • (ćelověke) m[1]
Related terms
nouns
- целꙗдь f (ćeljadĭ, “peasant”)
References
- ^ Zaliznyak, Andrey (2004) Древненовгородский диалект [Old Novgorod dialect][1] (in Russian), 2nd edition, Moscow: LRC Publishing House, →ISBN, page 816
Further reading
- “целовѣке”, in “Birchbark Letters Corpus”, in Russian National Corpus, https://ruscorpora.ru, 2003–2025