vaía: Difference between revisions
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
Days of the week in Radestrian · dvuoðe ag arieng / lièng
TheNightAvl (talk | contribs) m (→Radestrian) |
TheNightAvl (talk | contribs) m (→Etymology) |
||
Line 6: | Line 6: | ||
inherited | inherited | ||
from {{inherit|rad|rad-pro|laiɣor}}, | from {{inherit|rad|rad-pro|laiɣor}}, | ||
from {{affix|rad-pro|lıēr|-ɣor}}, | from {{affix|rad-pro|lıēr|-ɣor|t1=fifth}}, | ||
equivalent to {{affix|rad|vjeiș|-ía}}. | equivalent to {{affix|rad|vjeiș|-ía}}. | ||
Revision as of 20:37, 24 August 2023
Radestrian
Etymology
From Middle Radestrian vaíra, from Old Radestrian laijra, inherited from Proto-Radic *laiɣor, from *lıēr (“fifth”) + *-ɣor, equivalent to vjeiș + -ía.
Pronunciation
Noun
vaía inan (genitive singular vaijusk, nominative plural vaijore)
- (countable, in-world) The fifth day of the thirteenth Laefevo-Radestrian month, dzestasans, which only exists during leap years, equivalent to the Gregorian day of March 18 on leap years.
- (countable) leap day (extra day intercalated into a year)
Usage notes
- Thirteenth-month-specific words for days of the week must still be used with the month, i.e. vaía dzestaseng; vaía on its own cannot be used to mean March 18.
- When used to mean leap day, however, it may be used on its own: Ý vaijust gjelýdzei. (I was born on a leap day.)
- The second sense may refer both to an in-world leap day (the equivalent of March 18) and an out-of-world leap day (February 29).
Declension
See also
Laefevo-Radestrian week (in world) · areans | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 |
workdays · ardestse | weekend · dzestasate | |||||
varyga | atía | liría | asedua | laía | valygdras | vanints – dzevans |
asía | aía | vaía (leap day) | dzestasans | |||
Gregorian week (out of world) · lians | ||||||
workdays · ardestse | weekend · dzestasate | |||||
varyga | atía | liría | raldvuþs | asedua | laía | valygdras |
Monday | Tuesday | Wednesday | Thursday | Friday | Saturday | Sunday |
Categories:
- Radestrian terms inherited from Middle Radestrian
- Radestrian terms inherited from Old Radestrian
- Radestrian terms inherited from Proto-Radic
- Proto-Radic terms suffixed with *-ɣor
- Radestrian terms suffixed with -ía
- Rhymes:Radestrian/iːa
- Radestrian lemmas
- Radestrian nouns
- Radestrian inanimate nouns
- Radestrian countable nouns
- Radestrian in-world terms
- rad:Days