Definition of Appelative. Meaning of Appelative. Synonyms of Appelative

Here you will find one or more explanations in English for the word Appelative. Also in the bottom left of the page several parts of wikipedia pages related to the word Appelative and, of course, Appelative synonyms and on the right images related to the word Appelative.

Definition of Appelative

No result for Appelative. Showing similar results...

Meaning of Appelative from wikipedia

- In grammar, a noun is a word that represents a concrete or abstract thing, such as living creatures, places, actions, qualities, states of existence, and...
- lit. 'Jewess'), notably the King James Version, but the word is an appelative, there to indicate that Pharaoh's daughter was no longer a pagan. However...
- (1393) or Vraknye (1459). The name is probably derived from a Proto-Slavic appelative *vrakunъ, potentially reflecting Pre-Christian (pagan) rituals. The stem...
- noted for its growing and preservation of Kolanuts that earns it the appelative cognomen "Ijare Elewe Obi" That is, Ijare, the Kolanut city. AGAGU ****URES...
- one of the cities of the world nicknamed "City of Eternal Spring". This appelative derived from Alexander von Humboldt's Researches concerning the institutions...
- settlement of Trubín, with the addition of -sky suffix and the potok appelative. The naming was settled in 1976. Trubínsky potok is sourced on lower eastern...
- Meduna/Meduno (-dun) does not have a generic meaning of "mountains" and the Latin appelative mons/montes has not inherited a second semantic value of "castle/castles"...
- northern Slovakia. Rajec, Rajčianka, Rajčanka are derived from Proto-Slavic appelative *rajь – a wet, muddy place (modern Slovak raj – a paradise, "a place with...
- young". The ending -ov(a)/-av(a) is a common Slavic suffix used in appelatives and proper names. -ova denotes ownership, chiefly of feminine nouns....