[ˈju̟ŋkɛr]
ПроизходBorrowed from Russian ю́нкер (júnker), in turn from German Junker.
- historicaljunker (landed aristocracy in Prussia)
- obsoletecadet (a student at a military school who is training to be an officer)
Формию́нкер(canonical) · júnker(romanization) · ю́нкерски(adjective, relational) · ю́нкер(indefinite, singular) · ю́нкери(indefinite, plural) · ю́нкерът(definite, singular, subjective) · ю́нкерите(definite, plural, subjective) · ю́нкера(definite, objective, singular) · ю́нкерите(definite, objective, plural) · -(count-form, singular) · ю́нкера(count-form, plural)