ausis

See also: ausīs

Latin

Etymology 1

Participle

ausīs

  1. dative/ablative masculine/feminine/neuter plural of ausus

Etymology 2

Verb

ausis

  1. (Old Latin) second-person singular sigmatic future active indicative of audeō
Usage notes

See explanation at audeō.

Verb

ausīs

  1. (Old Latin) second-person singular sigmatic aorist active subjunctive of audeō
Usage notes

See explanation at audeō.

Latvian

Noun

ausis f

  1. nominative/vocative/accusative plural of auss

Participle

ausis (definite ausušais)

  1. having dawned; indefinite past active participle of aust

Declension

Indefinite declension (nenoteiktā galotne) of ausis
masculine (vīriešu dzimte) feminine (sieviešu dzimte)
singular plural singular plural
nominative ausis ausuši aususi ausušas
genitive ausuša ausušu ausušas ausušu
dative ausušam ausušiem ausušai ausušām
accusative ausušu ausušus ausušu ausušas
instrumental ausušu ausušiem ausušu ausušām
locative ausušā ausušos ausušā ausušās
vocative

Lithuanian

Etymology

From Proto-Balto-Slavic *auś-, from Proto-Indo-European *h₂ows-. Cognate to Latvian auss, Proto-Slavic *ȗxo.[1]

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): [ɐʊˈsʲɪs]

Noun

ausi̇̀s f (plural ãusys) stress pattern 4

  1. (anatomy) ear

Declension

Declension of ausi̇̀s
singular
(vienaskaita)
plural
(daugiskaita)
nominative (vardininkas) ausi̇̀s ãusys
genitive (kilmininkas) ausiẽs ausų̃
dative (naudininkas) ãusiai ausi̇̀ms
accusative (galininkas) ãusį ausi̇̀s
instrumental (įnagininkas) ausimi̇̀ ausimi̇̀s
locative (vietininkas) ausyjè ausysè
vocative (šauksmininkas) ausiẽ ãusys

References

  1. ^ Derksen, Rick (2015) “ausis”, in Etymological Dictionary of the Baltic Inherited Lexicon (Leiden Indo-European Etymological Dictionary Series; 13), Leiden, Boston: Brill, →ISBN, page 71