Reconstruction:Proto-Slavic/kuropъty
Proto-Slavic
Etymology
From *kura + *-o- + *pъta + *-y.
Noun
*kuropъty f
Declension
| singular | dual | plural | |
|---|---|---|---|
| nominative | *kuropъty | *kuropъtъvi | *kuropъtъvi |
| genitive | *kuropъtъve | *kuropъtъvu | *kuropъtъvъ |
| dative | *kuropъtъvi | *kuropъtъvьma, *kuropъtъvama* | *kuropъtъvьmъ, *kuropъtъvamъ* |
| accusative | *kuropъtъvь | *kuropъtъvi | *kuropъtъvi |
| instrumental | *kuropъtъvьjǫ, *kuropъtъvľǫ** | *kuropъtъvьma, *kuropъtъvama* | *kuropъtъvьmi, *kuropъtъvami* |
| locative | *kuropъtъve | *kuropъtъvu | *kuropъtъvьxъ, *kuropъtъvaxъ* |
| vocative | *kuropъty | *kuropъtъvi | *kuropъtъvi |
* -ьmъ/etc. are the original consonant-stem endings, while -amъ/etc. are later Common Slavic endings formed by analogy with a-stems.
** The second form occurs in languages that contract early across /j/ (e.g. Czech), while the first form occurs in languages that do not (e.g. Russian).
Descendants
- East Slavic:
- Old East Slavic: *куропътꙑ (*kuropŭty), *куропътъва (*kuropŭtŭva), куропъть (kuropŭtĭ)
- Old Ruthenian: куропа́тва (kuropátva), курупа́тва (kurupátva), коропа́тва (koropátva)
- Belarusian: курапа́тва (kurapátva); курапа́та (kurapáta) (dialectal)
- Ukrainian: куропа́тва (kuropátva); курупа́тва (kurupátva), куропа́та (kuropáta), коропа́та (koropáta) (dialectal)
- Russian: куропа́тва (kuropátva), ку́ропть (kúroptʹ), ку́ропоть (kúropotʹ), ку́ропать (kúropatʹ) (dialectal)
- Old Ruthenian: куропа́тва (kuropátva), курупа́тва (kurupátva), коропа́тва (koropátva)
- Old East Slavic: *куропътꙑ (*kuropŭty), *куропътъва (*kuropŭtŭva), куропъть (kuropŭtĭ)
- South Slavic:
- Serbo-Croatian:
- Cyrillic script: куроптва (dialectal, archaic)
- Latin script: kuroptva (dialectal, archaic)
- Slovene: kurnprat, kornbrat (tonal orthography)
- Serbo-Croatian:
- West Slavic: