ꙗскъ

Old East Slavic

Etymology

Borrowed from Old Norse askr ("wooden vessel or dish"), inherited from Proto-Germanic *askaz ("ash tree").

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /ˈjɑskʊ//ˈjaskʊ//ˈjask/
  • (ca. 9th CE) IPA(key): /ˈjɑskʊ/
  • (ca. 11th CE) IPA(key): /ˈjaskʊ/
  • (ca. 13th CE) IPA(key): /ˈjask/

  • Hyphenation: ꙗ́‧скъ

Noun

ꙗскъ (jaskŭ)

  1. alternative form of аскъ (askŭ)

Declension

Declension of ꙗскъ (u-stem)
singular dual plural
nominative ꙗскъ
jaskŭ
ꙗскꙑ
jasky
ꙗскове
jaskove
genitive ꙗску
jasku
ꙗскову
jaskovu
ꙗсковъ
jaskovŭ
dative ꙗскови, ꙗску
jaskovi, jasku
ꙗскъма
jaskŭma
ꙗскъмъ
jaskŭmŭ
accusative ꙗскъ
jaskŭ
ꙗскꙑ
jasky
ꙗскꙑ
jasky
instrumental ꙗскъмь
jaskŭmĭ
ꙗскъма
jaskŭma
ꙗскъми
jaskŭmi
locative ꙗску
jasku
ꙗскову
jaskovu
ꙗскъхъ
jaskŭxŭ
vocative ꙗскъ
jaskŭ
ꙗскꙑ
jasky
ꙗскове
jaskove

Descendants

  • Old Ruthenian: ꙗщъ (jašč)
    • Old Ruthenian: ꙗщикъ (jaščik)
      • Belarusian: я́шчык (jáščyk) (dialectal)
      • Ukrainian: я́щик (jáščyk)
  • Russian: я́щик (jáščik), я́щикъ (jáščik)Pre-reform orthography (1918)
    • Armenian: յաշիկ (yašik)
    • Azerbaijani: yeşik
    • Bashkir: йәшник (yəşnik)
    • Chechen: яьшка (jäška)
    • Kazakh: жәшік (jäşık)
    • Svan: ჲაშიკ (yašiḳ), ჰაშიკ (hašiḳ)
    • Uzbek: yashik
    • >? Russenorsk: njasika, njasikka