ππ°πΊπΊπΏπ
Gothic
Etymology
From Proto-Germanic *sakkuz, from Latin saccus, from Ancient Greek ΟΞ¬ΞΊΞΊΞΏΟ (sΓ‘kkos, βsack, bag; sackclothβ), from Semitic.
Noun
ππ°πΊπΊπΏπ β’ (sakkus) m
- sack
- (Christianity) garb worn for penitence or mourning
Declension
| Masculine/feminine u-stem | ||
|---|---|---|
| Singular | Plural | |
| Nominative | ππ°πΊπΊπΏπ sakkus |
ππ°πΊπΊπΎπΏπ sakkjus |
| Vocative | ππ°πΊπΊπ°πΏ sakkau |
ππ°πΊπΊπΎπΏπ sakkjus |
| Accusative | ππ°πΊπΊπΏ sakku |
ππ°πΊπΊπΏπ½π sakkuns |
| Genitive | ππ°πΊπΊπ°πΏπ sakkaus |
ππ°πΊπΊπΉπ
π΄ sakkiwΔ |
| Dative | ππ°πΊπΊπ°πΏ sakkau |
ππ°πΊπΊπΏπΌ sakkum |
This article is issued from Wiktionary. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.