ѣꙁдити
Old Novgorodian
Etymology
First attested in c. 1400‒1410. Inherited from Proto-Slavic *jězditi. Cognate with Old East Slavic ѣздити (jězditi), Old Ruthenian ѣ́здити (jě́zditi).
Pronunciation
- Hyphenation: ѣ‧ꙁди‧ти
Verb
ѣꙁдити • (jězditi) impf[1]
Related terms
adjectives
- наѣжгь (najěžgĭ)
nouns
- оуѣꙁде (ujězde)
proper nouns
- Вънѣꙁде (Vŭnězde)
- Вънѣꙁдове (Vŭnězdove)
verbs
- въꙁъѣхати (vŭzŷjěxati)
- вꙑѣхати (vyjěxati)
- доѣхати (dojěxati)
- иꙁъѣꙁдити (izŷjězditi)
- отъѣꙁдити (otŷjězditi)
- поѣхати (pojěxati)
- приѣжгати (prijěžgati)
- приѣжджати (prijěždžati)
- приѣхати (prijěxati)
- ѣхати (jěxati)
References
- ^ Zaliznyak, Andrey (2004) Древненовгородский диалект [Old Novgorod dialect][1] (in Russian), 2nd edition, Moscow: LRC Publishing House, →ISBN, page 819
Further reading
- “ѣꙁдити”, in “Birchbark Letters Corpus”, in Russian National Corpus, https://ruscorpora.ru, 2003–2025