/ˈilkeæ/, [ˈilk̟e̞æ]
AlkuperäFrom Proto-Finnic *ilkëda, probably borrowed (and derived) from Proto-Germanic *ilhilaz (“bad, evil”). Cognates include Karelian ilkie, Estonian ilge, English ill.
- bad, mean, wicked, evil
- mischievous, troublesome, cheeky, badly behaved
“Matilla oli Eetu-niminen kaksoisveli, joka on aina ollut ilkeä ja huonokäytöksinen.” — Matthew had a twin brother called Edward, who was always mischievous and badly behaved.
- uncomfortable, nasty, bad
“Vamman takia urheilu tuntuu tätä nykyä ilkeälle.” — Because of the injury, doing sports feels uncomfortable these days.
“»Ilkeä kaasunhaju porraskäytävässä. Aivan pää tulee kipeäksi!»” — "A foul gas smell in the stairwell. Enough to give you a headache!"
- active, connegative, form-of, indicative, presentpresent active indicative connegative
- form-of, imperative, present, second-person, singularsecond-person singular present imperative
- active, connegative, form-of, imperative, presentsecond-person singular present active imperative connegative
Muodotilkeämpi(comparative) · ilkein(superlative) · ilkeä(nominative, singular) · ilkeät(nominative, plural) · ilkeä(accusative, nominative, singular) · ilkeät(accusative, nominative, plural) · ilkeän(accusative, genitive, singular) · ilkeät(accusative, genitive, plural) · ilkeän(genitive, singular) · ilkeiden(genitive, plural) · ilkeitten(genitive, plural) · ilkeäin(genitive, plural, rare) · ilkeää(partitive, singular) · ilkeätä(partitive, singular) · ilkeitä(partitive, plural) · ilkeässä(inessive, singular) · ilkeissä(inessive, plural) · ilkeästä(elative, singular) · ilkeistä(elative, plural) · ilkeään(illative, singular)
Lähde: Wiktionary