roie

See also: roie-

Estonian

Etymology

From Proto-Finnic [Term?]. Cognate to Votic roittu (trash), Ingrian roitto (trash) and Livvi roitto (guts, innard, insides of a dead animal).

Noun

roie (genitive roide, partitive roiet)

  1. (anatomy) rib
    Synonym: (somewhat colloquial) ribi

Declension

Declension of roie (ÕS type 6/mõte, id-i gradation)
singular plural
nominative roie roided
accusative nom.
gen. roide
genitive roiete
partitive roiet roideid
illative roidesse roietesse
roideisse
inessive roides roietes
roideis
elative roidest roietest
roideist
allative roidele roietele
roideile
adessive roidel roietel
roideil
ablative roidelt roietelt
roideilt
translative roideks roieteks
roideiks
terminative roideni roieteni
essive roidena roietena
abessive roideta roieteta
comitative roidega roietega

Manx

Etymology 1

From Old Irish reithid, from Proto-Celtic *reteti, from Proto-Indo-European *Hreth₂-.

Pronunciation

Verb

roie (verbal noun roie, past participle roit)

  1. to run, race, scurry, bolt, dart
  2. (figuratively) to run, flow, extend through
    Ta ny sleityn roie shiar as sheear.The mountains run from east to west.
    Ta'n awin roie stiagh 'sy logh.The river runs into the lake.
Derived terms

Noun

roie (m)

  1. verbal noun of roie

Etymology 2

From Old Irish rïam, the third-person singular masculine form of Old Irish , from Proto-Celtic *ɸrīs (compare Gaulish ris), from Proto-Indo-European *per-. Cognate with English first and Latin prīscus (former). Supplanted by roish, the form used before the definite article. See also rieau and the cognates Irish roimh, Scottish Gaelic ro, and Classical Gaelic .

Pronunciation

Adverb

roïe

  1. before, earlier
    Ta mee baghey ayns y jiass, myr dooyrt me roïe.I live in the south, as I said earlier.
    Ta mee roïe er chlashtyn yn skeeal shen.I've heard that story before.
    • 1796, Thomas Christian, Pargys Caillit, translation of Paradise Lost by John Milton, published 1872, lines 888-889:
      Ard heose 'syn aer, as faagit heese nyn yeï, / Ooigyn dowin agglagh raad v'ad roïe nyn soie.
      High up in the sky, and left beneath, behind them, / Deep, awful pits where they previously rested.

Preposition

roïe

  1. (obsolete) unconjugated form of roish (before)
Inflection
Inflection of roie
Person: simple emphatic
singular first roym roym's
second royd royd's
third m roish roishyn
f roee roeeish
plural first roin roinyn
second reue reueish
third roue rouesyn

References

  1. ^ Christopher Lewin (2020) Aspects of the historical phonology of Manx, Edinburgh: University of Edinburgh, →DOI, page 70
  2. ^ Christopher Lewin (2020) Aspects of the historical phonology of Manx, Edinburgh: University of Edinburgh, →DOI, page 71