Borrowed from Polish pas, from Proto-Slavic *pȍjāsъ. Doublet of по́яс (pójas), the inherited East Slavic form.
пас • (pas) m inan (genitive па́са, nominative plural па́сы, genitive plural па́саў)
singular | plural | |
---|---|---|
nominative | пас pas |
па́сы pásy |
genitive | па́са pása |
па́саў pásaŭ |
dative | па́су pásu |
па́сам pásam |
accusative | пас pas |
па́сы pásy |
instrumental | па́сам pásam |
па́самі pásami |
locative | па́се pásje |
па́сах pásax |
count form | — | па́сы1 pásy1 |
1Used with the numbers 2, 3, 4 and higher numbers after 20 ending in 2, 3, and 4.
From Proto-Turkic *baĺč (“head”). Cognate with Shor паш, Dolgan бас; Crimean Tatar baş, Old Turkic 𐰉𐱁 (baš), Turkmen baş, Uzbek bosh, Krymchak баш ;Tofa баъш (báş), Tuvan баш (baş);Urum баш; Western Yugur pas ,Yakut бас (bas); Kazakh бас (bas), Kyrgyz баш (baş), Southern Altai баш (baš), Tatar баш (baş), Turkish baş, etc.
пас • (pas)
(This etymology is missing or incomplete. Please add to it, or discuss it at the Etymology scriptorium.)
пас • (pas)
пас • (pas) m inan (genitive па́са, nominative plural па́сы, genitive plural па́сов)
пас • (pas)
Inherited from Proto-Slavic *pьsъ.
па̏с m anim (Latin spelling pȁs, relational adjective па̏сјӣ or псе̏ћӣ, diminutive пси̏ћ)
singular | plural | |
---|---|---|
nominative | пȁс | пси̏ |
genitive | псȁ | пáсā |
dative | псу̏ | пси̏ма |
accusative | псȁ | псȅ |
vocative | псȅ / псу̏ | пси |
locative | псу̏ | пси̏ма |
instrumental | псȍм | пси̏ма |
Syncopic form of по̏ја̄с. Compare Czech pás, Polish pas.
па̑с m inan (Latin spelling pȃs)
singular | plural | |
---|---|---|
nominative | пас | пасови |
genitive | паса | пасова |
dative | пасу | пасовима |
accusative | пас | пасове |
vocative | пасе | пасови |
locative | пасу | пасовима |
instrumental | пасом | пасовима |
Borrowed from English pass or French passe.
па̑с m inan (Latin spelling pȃs)