Morphologically from tukā + mō. Endzelīns has tried to link Latvian Tukums with tūkt. Dzintra Hirša offers a Finnic source, including Estonian tukkuma (“to snooze”), tukk, tuka (“crest, nape”) + maa (“land”), Livonian tutkām (“tip, end”) + mō (“land”).[1]
Tukāmō
singular (ikšlug) | plural (pǟgiņlug) | |
---|---|---|
nominative (nominatīv) | Tukāmō | – |
genitive (genitīv) | Tukāmō | – |
partitive (partitīv) | Tukāmōdõ | – |
dative (datīv) | Tukāmōn | – |
instrumental (instrumentāl) | Tukāmōkõks | – |
illative (illatīv) | Tukāmōzõ | – |
inessive (inesīv) | Tukāmōs Tukāmōsõ |
– |
elative (elatīv) | Tukāmōst Tukāmōstõ |
– |
allative (allatīv) | Tukāmōlõ | – |
adessive (adesīv) | Tukāmōl | – |
ablative (ablatīv) | Tukāmōld | – |