gah
English
editInterjection
editgah
- Expressing exasperation or annoyance.
- 2009 January 20, Alison Godfrey, quoting Bronwyn Lovejoy, “Coles, Woolworths and IGA workers vent about customers on Facebook”, in Herald Sun[1], archived from the original on 20 January 2009:
- “And stop calling it soccerball! gah! do any of the tickets say soccerball? no!“”
Anagrams
editAzerbaijani
editEtymology
editPronunciation
editConjunction
editgah
- Used to denote repeated alternation of enumerated actions, events or objects.
- Gah belə deyir, gah elə.
- Sometimes he says this, sometimes that.
- Gah sola gedir, gah sağa, özü bilmir hara getsin.
- He walks left, then he walks right, he doesn't know where to go himself.
Further reading
edit- “gah” in Obastan.com.
Chipewyan
editEtymology
editNoun
editgah
References
edit- Young, Robert W & William Morgan, Sr. The Navajo Language. A Grammar and Colloquial Dictionary. University of New Mexico Press. Albuquerque, NM: 1987.
Navajo
editEtymology
editCognate with Tsuut'ina nitłʼadigha, Chipewyan gah, Beaver gaah, Carrier goh, Sekani gah, Ahtna ggax, Tlingit g̱áx̱ and South Slavey gah.
Noun
editgah
Derived terms
edit- gahtsoh (hare)
Pali
editEtymology
editInherited from Sanskrit गृह् (gṛh).
Root
editgah (Pali name gaha)
Usage notes
editThe initial consonant tends to geminate after prefixes. Nasals after the root may be retroflexed.
Derived terms
editVerbs
Non-present participles, gerundives, absolutives and infinitives
Nouns
Sekani
editEtymology
editNoun
editgah
References
edit- Young, Robert W & William Morgan, Sr. The Navajo Language. A Grammar and Colloquial Dictionary. University of New Mexico Press. Albuquerque, NM: 1987.
South Slavey
editEtymology
editFrom Proto-Athabaskan *gax̣. Cognates include Navajo gah and Dogrib gah.
Pronunciation
editNoun
editgah (stem -gah-)
Inflection
editPossessive inflection of gah (-gahé)
singular | plural | ||
---|---|---|---|
1st person | segahé | naxegahé | |
2nd person | negahé | ||
3rd person | 1) | — | gigahé |
2) | megahé | gogahé | |
4th person | yegahé | ||
reflexive | sp. | ɂedegahé | kedegahé |
unsp. | degahé | ||
reciprocal | — | ɂełegahé | |
indefinite | ɂegahé | ||
areal | gogahé | ||
1) Used when the subject is a group of human beings and the object is singular. 2) Used when the previous condition does not apply. |
References
edit- Keren Rice (1989) A Grammar of Slave, Berlin, West Germany: Mouton de Gruyter, →ISBN, page 99
Western Apache
editNoun
editgah
Categories:
- English lemmas
- English interjections
- English terms with quotations
- Azerbaijani terms borrowed from Persian
- Azerbaijani terms derived from Persian
- Azerbaijani terms with IPA pronunciation
- Azerbaijani lemmas
- Azerbaijani conjunctions
- Azerbaijani terms with usage examples
- Chipewyan lemmas
- Chipewyan nouns
- chp:Lagomorphs
- Navajo lemmas
- Navajo nouns
- nv:Lagomorphs
- Pali terms inherited from Sanskrit
- Pali terms derived from Sanskrit
- Pali lemmas
- Pali roots
- Sekani lemmas
- Sekani nouns
- sek:Lagomorphs
- South Slavey terms inherited from Proto-Athabaskan
- South Slavey terms derived from Proto-Athabaskan
- South Slavey terms with IPA pronunciation
- South Slavey lemmas
- South Slavey nouns
- xsl:Lagomorphs
- Western Apache lemmas
- Western Apache nouns
- apw:Mammals