эльф

Kazakh

Alternative scripts
Arabic ەلف
Cyrillic эльф
Latin elf

Etymology

Borrowed from Russian эльф (elʹf), from English elf.

Noun

эльф • (élf)

  1. elf

Declension

Declension of эльф
singular plural
nominative эльф (élf) эльфтер (élfter)
genitive эльфтің (élftıñ) эльфтердің (élfterdıñ)
dative эльфке (élfke) эльфтерге (élfterge)
accusative эльфті (élftı) эльфтерді (élfterdı)
locative эльфте (élfte) эльфтерде (élfterde)
ablative эльфтен (élften) эльфтерден (élfterden)
instrumental эльфпен (élfpen) эльфтермен (élftermen)

Russian

Etymology

Borrowed from English elf.

Compare with Ukrainian ельф (elʹf).

Sense 2 was derived in analogy to the use of орк (ork) referring to Russian soldiers, or Russians in general.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): [ɛlʲf]

Noun

эльф • (elʹfm anim (genitive э́льфа, nominative plural э́льфы, genitive plural э́льфов, feminine эльфи́йка, relational adjective эльфи́йский)

  1. (mythology, fantasy) elf
    Synonym: (Norse mythology) альв (alʹv)
  2. (uncommon, slang, derogatory) a Ukrainian, especially one who serves in the Armed Forces of Ukraine.
    Synonym: (soldier in the Ukrainian Armed Forces) ВСУ́шник (VSÚšnik)

Declension

Coordinate terms

  • Эльда́р (Elʹdár) (an elf-like race of aliens from the Warhammer games)

Derived terms

Descendants

  • Kazakh: эльф (élf)