краль
Church Slavonic
Etymology
Inherited from Proto-Slavic *korľь.
Pronunciation
- Hyphenation: краль
Noun
краль (kralĭ) m
Pannonian Rusyn
Etymology
From Old Slovak kráľ, from Proto-Slavic *korľь. Cognates include Slovak kráľ and Carpathian Rusyn коро́ль (korólʹ).
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): [ˈkraʎ]
- Rhymes: -aʎ
- Hyphenation: краль
Noun
краль (kralʹ) m pers (feminine equivalent кралїца, related adjective кральов)
Declension
| singular | plural | |
|---|---|---|
| nominative | краль (kralʹ) | кральове (kralʹove) |
| genitive | краля (kralja) | кральох (kralʹox) |
| dative | кральови (kralʹovi) | кральом (kralʹom) |
| accusative | краля (kralja) | кральох (kralʹox) |
| instrumental | кральом (kralʹom) | кральми (kralʹmi) |
| locative | кральови (kralʹovi) | кральох (kralʹox) |
| vocative | кралю (kralju) | кральове (kralʹove) |
Related terms
nouns
- вицекраль m pers (vicekralʹ)
- екскраль m pers (ekskralʹ)
- кральовство n (kralʹovstvo)
- подкраль m pers (podkralʹ)
References
- Medʹeši, H., Fejsa, M., Timko-Djitko, O. (2010) “краль”, in Ramač, Ju., editor, Руско-сербски словнїк [Rusyn-Serbian Dictionary] (in Pannonian Rusyn), Novi Sad: Faculty of Philosophy
Russian
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): [kralʲ]
Etymology 1
Borrowed from Czech král. Doublet of король (korolʹ).
Noun
краль • (kralʹ) m anim (genitive кра́ля, nominative plural кра́ли, genitive plural кра́лей, feminine кра́ля)
- (obsolete, rare, card games) king
- Synonym: коро́ль (korólʹ)
Declension
Declension of краль (anim masc-form soft-stem accent-a)
Etymology 2
Noun
краль • (kralʹ) f anim pl
- genitive/accusative plural of кра́ля (králja)