[ˈt͡sɛjx]
OriginInherited from Old Czech cajch, cejch. Borrowed from Middle High German zeichen, from Old High German zeihhan, from Proto-West Germanic *taikn, from Proto-Germanic *taikną, from Proto-Indo-European *deyḱ- (“to point out”). First attested in the 14th century.
- inanimate, masculinebrand (mark made by burning)
Formscejch(nominative, singular) · cejchy(nominative, plural) · cejchu(genitive, singular) · cejchů(genitive, plural) · cejchu(dative, singular) · cejchům(dative, plural) · cejch(accusative, singular) · cejchy(accusative, plural) · cejchu(singular, vocative) · cejchy(plural, vocative) · cejchu(locative, singular) · cejších(locative, plural) · cejchem(instrumental, singular) · cejchy(instrumental, plural)
Source: Wiktionary — CC BY-SA 4.0