Ruthenian: *<span class="searchmatch">лоша́</span> (*lošá) Belarusian: лаша́ (lašá), <span class="searchmatch">лоша́</span> (lošá) (dialectal) Ukrainian: <span class="searchmatch">лоша́</span> (lošá) → Polish: łosza Middle Russian: <span class="searchmatch">лоша́</span> (lošá) (c. 1489)...
See also: losa and losa' loša (Cyrillic spelling <span class="searchmatch">лоша</span>) inflection of loš: feminine nominative/vocative singular indefinite masculine/neuter genitive singular...
Hyphenation: на‧ви‧ка на̑вика f (Latin spelling nȃvika) habit, practice То је <span class="searchmatch">лоша</span> навика. ― That's a bad habit. “навика”, in Hrvatski jezični portal [Croatian...
tea, please? (idiomatic) to become ill with Той беше направил една много <span class="searchmatch">лоша</span> пневмония. Toj beše napravil edna mnogo loša pnevmonija. He had gotten ill...
See also: łoszą Borrowed from Old Ruthenian *<span class="searchmatch">лоша́</span> (*lošá), from a Turkic language. First attested in 1747–1756. Compare Russian ло́шадь (lóšadʹ). IPA(key):...
Inherited from Old East Slavic лошакъ (lošakŭ), from <span class="searchmatch">лоша</span> (loša). By surface analysis, *<span class="searchmatch">лоша́</span> (*lošá) + -акъ (-ak). Cognate with Russian лоша́к (lošák)...
обу́вки ― lóši obúvki ― bad shoes malignant, severe (of condition, sickness) <span class="searchmatch">лоша</span> болест ― loša bolest ― malignant sickness evil, maleficent, vicious, wicked...
(iznevidélica) прия́тна изнена́да ― prijátna iznenáda ― pleasant surprise <span class="searchmatch">ло́ша</span> изнена́да ― lóša iznenáda ― bad, nasty surprise (figuratively) secret, riddle...
From <span class="searchmatch">лоша</span> (loša) + -дь (-dĭ). The suffix is the same as in Old Church Slavonic ослѣдь (oslědĭ, “onager, wild ass”). лошадь (lošadĭ) f (related adjective...
relational adjective жереб'я́чий, diminutive жереб'я́тко) foal Synonym: <span class="searchmatch">лоша́</span> (lošá) жеребе́ць (žerebécʹ) жере́бна (žerébna) же́реб (žéreb) Hrinchenko...