хьун
Chechen
Etymology
Inherited from Proto-Nakh *ħuᶰ. Cognates include Bats ჰ̡უჼ (h̡ũ) and Ingush хьу (ḥʳu).
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /ˈħũ/
Noun
хьун • (ḥʳun) class jj
Declension
| singular | plural | |
|---|---|---|
| nominative | хьун (ḥʳun) | хьаннаш (ḥʳannaš) |
| genitive | хьуьнан (ḥʳünan) | хьаннийн (ḥʳanniı̇n) |
| dative | хьуьнна (ḥʳünna) | хьаннашна (ḥʳannašna) |
| ergative | хьуьно̄ (ḥʳünoo) | хьаннаша (ḥʳannaša) |
| allative | хьуьне̄ (ḥʳünee) | хьаннашка (ḥʳannaška) |
| instrumental | хьуьнца (ḥʳünca) | хьаннашца (ḥʳannašca) |
| lative | хьуьнах (ḥʳünax) | хьаннех (ḥʳannex) |
| comparative | хьуьнал (ḥʳünal) | хьаннел (ḥʳannel) |
References
- Matsiev, Akhmat G. (1927), Чеченско-русский словарь / Нохчийн-оьрсийн словарь [Chechen-Russian dictionary] (in Russian), Grozny: Typographic-literary publishing house of the newspaper “Serlo”, Krainatsizdat, page 180
- Matsiev, Akhmat G. (1961), Чеченско-русский словарь / Нохчийн-оьрсийн словарь [Chechen-Russian dictionary] (in Russian), Moscow: State Publishing House of Foreign and Ethnicity Dictionaries, page 459
- Nichols, Johanna; Vagapov, Arbi (2004), “хьун”, in Chechen–English and English–Chechen Dictionary, London and New York: RoutledgeCurzon, page 220b