genune
Romanian
Alternative forms
- genună
- gerune (regional, Transylvania)
- gerure, geroe (archaic)
Etymology
Probably from Latin caerula (“pertaining to the sea”) (likely through an initial early Romanian form *cerure or *cerură, which underwent changes due to dissimilation and other processes, perhaps derhotacization; see some of the above dialectal or archaic alternative forms such as gerure, which were more conservative in pronunciation); some variants possibly derive from the form caerulea. Another theory instead suggests a Vulgar Latin root *girōnem / gyrōnem, from *gyrō (“whirlpool”), presumably stemming ultimately from Ancient Greek γῦρος (gûros)[1].
Noun
genune f (plural genuni)
Declension
Declension of genune
| singular | plural | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| indefinite articulation | definite articulation | indefinite articulation | definite articulation | |
| nominative/accusative | (o) genune | genunea | (niște) genuni | genunile |
| genitive/dative | (unei) genuni | genunii | (unor) genuni | genunilor |
| vocative | genune, genuneo | genunilor | ||
References
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