подошва

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Russian

Etymology

  • Another possibility is that both подо́шва (podóšva) and по́чва (póčva) come from Proto-Slavic *podъšьva (whence Czech počev), which would yield nominative *подшевь (*podševʹ) ~ genitive *подошви (*podošvi), each giving rise, after transfer into a-stem, to a complete levelled paradigm.

Pronunciation

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Noun

подо́шва (podóšvaf inan (genitive подо́швы, nominative plural подо́швы, genitive plural подо́шв)

  1. sole (bottom of the foot or of the shoe)
  2. foot (of the mountain)

Declension

Synonyms

Descendants

References

  1. ^ Sreznevsky, Izmail I. (1902) “подъшьва”, in Матеріалы для Словаря древне-русскаго языка по письменнымъ памятникамъ (in Russian), volume 2 (Л – П), Saint Petersburg: Department of Russian Language and Literature of the Imperial Academy of Sciences, column 1071
  2. ^ Vasmer, Max (1964–1973) “подошва”, in Oleg Trubachyov, transl., Этимологический словарь русского языка (in Russian), Moscow: Progress
  3. ^ Chernykh, P. Ja. (1993) “подошва”, in Историко-этимологический словарь русского языка (in Russian), 3rd edition, volume 2 (панцирь – ящур), Moscow: Russian Lang., →ISBN, page 49
  4. ^ Ulukhanov, I. S., editor (2000), “подъшьва”, in Словарь древнерусского языка (XI–XIV вв.): в 10 т. (in Russian), volume 6 (овадъ – покласти), Moscow: Russian Lang., Azbukovnik, →ISBN, page 558

Further reading