-с
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Moksha
[edit]Etymology
[edit]Perhaps related to Estonian -sse, Livonian -zõ (“[illative suffix]”), e.g., mōzõ.
Suffix
[edit]-с • (-s)
- illative suffix
Derived terms
[edit]Mongolian
[edit]Etymology 1
[edit]Mongolian | Cyrillic |
---|---|
᠊ᠰ (-s) | -с (-s) |
Suffix
[edit]-с • (-s)
- Forms the plural form of nouns.
Etymology 2
[edit]Mongolian | Cyrillic |
---|---|
᠊ᠰᠤᠨ (-sun) | -с (-s) |
Suffix
[edit]-с • (-s)
- Forms nouns from nouns and verbs, sometimes with no apparent change of meaning.
Russian
[edit]Alternative forms
[edit]- -съ (-s) — Pre-reform orthography (1918)
Etymology
[edit]An abbreviated form of су́дарь (súdarʹ, “sir”), суда́рыня (sudárynja, “ma'am”).
Suffix
[edit]-с • (-s)
- (obsolete) sir, ma'am (an honorific Russian suffix that was formerly used to emphasize the speaker’s politeness or servility before a person of higher social status).
Usage notes
[edit]- The suffix can be attached to various parts of speech, usually at the end of a sentence, usually only once.
- The suffix was common in speech in the early and mid-19th century, but over the course of the late 19th century it went out of fashion, acquiring an undertone of servility, self-deprecation, and sometimes irony. By the 20th century, it was seen as an archaism, used either ironically or as a conscious marker of traditionalism in educated speech. In modern Russian, it's very rare, and is used for emphasis in a humorous, ironic, or sarcastic way.
Related terms
[edit]- словое́рс (slovojérs)
Categories:
- Moksha lemmas
- Moksha suffixes
- Moksha terms with usage examples
- Mongolian lemmas
- Mongolian suffixes
- Mongolian noun-forming suffixes
- Mongolian plural suffixes
- Russian lemmas
- Russian suffixes
- Russian terms with obsolete senses
- Russian terms with usage examples
- Russian abbreviations
- Russian humorous terms
- Russian terms of address