[nioɾi]
OriginFrom Old Georgian ნიორი (niori), borrowed from a Northeast Caucasian language: compare Lak нур (nur, “a kind of weed with edible root”), Tabasaran нюгьр-ер pl (njuhr-er, “mint”), Tsakhur нуъйе (nuʔje, “mint”) etc. and see the Lak entry for more.
Formsniori(romanization) · ნივრები(plural) · ნიორი(nominative, singular) · ნივრები(nominative, plural) · ნიორნი(archaic, nominative, plural) · ნიორმა(ergative, singular) · ნივრებმა(ergative, plural) · ნიორთ(archaic, ergative, plural) · ნიორთა(archaic, ergative, plural) · ნიორს(dative, singular) · ნიორსა(dative, singular) · ნივრებს(dative, plural) · ნივრებსა(dative, plural) · ნიორთ(archaic, dative, plural) · ნიორთა(archaic, dative, plural) · ნივრის(genitive, singular) · ნივრისა(genitive, singular) · ნივრების(genitive, plural) · ნივრებისა(genitive, plural) · ნიორთ(archaic, genitive, plural)
Source: Wiktionary — CC BY-SA 4.0