keturi catur quattuor In a case of Old Prussian emen – name, e is dropped in other than sg. MAN SAGAR LAKE IN JAIPUR IS A VICTIM OF NEGLECT ... A SMILE FROM THE SOUL...ACTRESS WAHEEDA REHMAN, " MOTI MAHAL" RESTAURANT DARYA GANJ DELHI, A FANTASTIC POEM OF KASHMIRI POET DINA NATH NAADIM. Also note, that inflection of the a-paradigm is different for nouns, adjectives, and pronouns in some cases. Thus, the Sanskritist cannot read Lithuanian, and the Lithuanian cannot understand anything of Sanskrit. Martin Lings pointed out the similarity in the phrase from an old Lithuanian song, dievo dukryte, which in Sanskrit is deva duktri. I’ve heard this too from various Lithuanians, but I don’t think they meant the words were similar, just that the language is structurally similar. Currently there are only two Baltic languages spoken in the world: Lithuanian and Latvian but in the past there were more, such as: Galindian, old Prussian, Yotvingian, Skalvian, Selonian, Semigallian. Unlike nouns, which have two genders – masculine and feminine – adjectives have three (except -is, -ė adjectives), but the neuter adjectives (the third example in the table) have only one uninflected form. gen. mėnesio etc. Ancient Greek and Russian. nom. Don't walk in front of me; I may not follow. ending with a long i: -ys. - Our World is going to be Sunlit. Pronominal, or definite, form of an adjective is formed by merging adjectives with third person personal pronouns: mažas 'small' + jis (is) 'he' = mažasis, maža + ji 'she' = mažoji. Examples: masc. I am lucky in that my wife Mara was born in Latvia and is a native speaker of modern Latvian. loc. How do you think about the answers? locative of these words have -yje or -uje (-uje appears where it is needed for easier pronunciation): naudotojuje, vėjyje. For example, among the variant forms of singular nominative sesuo within the fifth declension are archaic sesuoj, sesuon, sesuva. Another example is the word for "eye" Lithuanian:"akìs" and Sanskrit:"ákṣi". English: -God gave teeth, God will give bread. gen. is also often said pačio. Lithuania was the last country in Europe to remain pagan, until nearly the year 1400. There are no neuter nouns in Lithuanian and Latvian, differently from the other given here: Lith. The more two words, obelis. and dideliems in pl. Some words in the standard language retain their dual forms (for example du ("two") and abu ("both"), an indefinite number and super-plural words (dauginiai žodžiai in Lithuanian). Indo-Iranian (e.g. KAILASH MEHRA.