барка

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Russian

Russian Wikipedia has an article on:
Wikipedia ru

Etymology

Inherited from Middle Russian барка (barka), from Middle Low German barke (shallow wide boat, usually flat-bottomed), from Middle Dutch barke, from Middle French barque, from Old Occitan barca, from Late Latin barca, from Vulgar Latin *bārica, from Latin bāris (Egyptian shallow wide flat-bottomed river boat), from Ancient Greek βᾶρις (bâris), from Demotic br, from Egyptian bꜣjr, further origin uncertain.

Attested since the 14th-15th centuries (Novgorod 4th chronicle).

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key):
  • Audio:(file)

Noun

ба́рка (bárkaf inan (genitive ба́рки, nominative plural ба́рки, genitive plural ба́рок)

  1. kind of a barge, specifically a wooden flat-bottomed river boat, usually undecked
  2. genitive singular of барк (bark)

Declension

See also

References

Serbo-Croatian

Etymology

Borrowed from Italian barca.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /bâːrka/
  • Hyphenation: бар‧ка

Noun

ба̑рка f (Latin spelling bȃrka)

  1. boat (especially at the Adriatic)

Declension

References

Ukrainian

Ukrainian Wikipedia has an article on:
Wikipedia uk

Etymology

From Middle Low German barke (shallow wide boat, usually flat-bottomed), from Middle Dutch barke, from Middle French barque, from Old Occitan barca, from Late Latin barca, from Vulgar Latin *bārica, from Latin bāris (Egyptian shallow wide flat-bottomed river boat), from Ancient Greek βᾶρις (bâris), from Demotic br, from Egyptian bꜣjr, further origin uncertain.

Pronunciation

Noun

ба́рка (bárkaf inan (genitive ба́рки, nominative plural ба́рки, genitive plural ба́рок)

  1. kind of a barge, specifically a wooden flat-bottomed undecked river boat

Declension

References