эй

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Eastern Mari

Etymology

Borrowed from Russian эй (ej).

Pronunciation

Interjection

эй (ej)

  1. hey!
  2. oh!, ah! (expresses surprise, delight, sadness, pain, regret, disappointment, reproach, concern, etc.)

Particle

эй (ej)

  1. emphatic particle
    вараш кодаш огыл манын, эй куржам, эй куржам
    varaš kodaš ogyl manyn, ej kuržam, ej kuržam
    I don't want to be late, I'm off and running

References

  • J. Bradley et al. (2023) “эй”, in The Mari Web Project: Mari-English Dictionary, University of Vienna

Erzya

Эй палт.

Etymology

From Proto-Mordvinic *jäj~*jäŋ, from Proto-Uralic *jäŋe. Cognates include Moksha эй (ej), Finnish jää, Livonian jeij, Northern Sami jiekŋa, Eastern Mari ий (ij), Hungarian jég.

Pronunciation

This entry needs pronunciation information. If you are familiar with the IPA then please add some!

Noun

эй (ej)

  1. ice
    кельме теке эйkeľme ťeke ejcold as ice

Declension

This entry needs an inflection-table template.

References

  • V. I. Ščankina (2011) Russko-mokšansko-erzjanskij slovarʹ , Saransk, →ISBN
  • Entry #171 in Uralonet, online Uralic etymological database of the Hungarian Research Centre for Linguistics.
  • Keresztes, László (1986) Geschichte der mordwinischen Konsonantismus II. Etymologisches Belegmaterial, Szeged: Studia Uralo-Altaica 26.

Ket

Noun

эй (ej?

  1. tongue

References

Moksha

Etymology

From Proto-Mordvinic *jäɣ from Proto-Uralic *jäŋe. Compare Proto-Uralic *jäkšV (cold or cool). Cognates include Erzya эй (ej), Finnish jää, Livonian jeij, Northern Sami jiekŋa and Hungarian jég.

Noun

эй (äj)

  1. ice

References

  • V. I. Ščankina (2011) Russko-mokšansko-erzjanskij slovarʹ , Saransk, →ISBN

Nanai

Etymology

From Proto-Tungusic *əri, compare Evenki эр (ər), Manchu ᡝᡵᡝ (ere).

Pronoun

эй (ey)

  1. this

Russian

Pronunciation

Etymology 1

Interjection

эй (ej)

  1. hey! (you, there!)
Descendants
  • Eastern Mari: эй (ej)

Etymology 2

Borrowed from English a.

Noun

эй (ejn inan (indeclinable)

  1. (English letter) A, a