[sit͡sʰχe]
OriginDerived from Old Georgian სიცხჱ (sicxē), ultimately from Proto-Kartvelian *c₁x-; hence related to Mingrelian ჩხანა (čxana), Laz ჩხვაფა (çxvapa) and Svan იშხი (išxi, “burning”). Equivalent to modern ცხ-ელი (cx-eli, “hot”) + სი- -ე (si- -e, abstract noun-forming circumfix).
As often occurs with this circumfix, its addition led to the loss of the adjective ending -ელი (-eli).
- uncountableheat
- uncountablefever
Formssicxe(romanization) · სიცხე(nominative, singular) · სიცხეები(nominative, plural) · სიცხენი(archaic, nominative, plural) · სიცხემ(ergative, singular) · სიცხეებმა(ergative, plural) · სიცხეთ(archaic, ergative, plural) · სიცხეთა(archaic, ergative, plural) · სიცხეს(dative, singular) · სიცხესა(dative, singular) · სიცხეებს(dative, plural) · სიცხეებსა(dative, plural) · სიცხეთ(archaic, dative, plural) · სიცხეთა(archaic, dative, plural) · სიცხის(genitive, singular) · სიცხისა(genitive, singular) · სიცხეების(genitive, plural) · სიცხეებისა(genitive, plural) · სიცხეთ(archaic, genitive, plural) · სიცხეთა(archaic, genitive, plural)
Source: Wiktionary — CC BY-SA 4.0