[ˈtʰraːks], [ˈtraks]
OriginFrom Ancient Greek Θρᾷξ (Thrāîx).
- alt-of, declension-3, one-terminationalternative letter-case form of thrāx
- declension-3, one-terminationThracian
- alt-of, declension-3alternative letter-case form of thrāx
- declension-3, historicalA person from or an inhabitant of Thrace.
FormsThrāx(canonical) · Thrācis(genitive) · Thrāx(feminine, masculine, neuter, nominative, singular) · Thrācēs(feminine, masculine, nominative, plural) · Thrācia(neuter, nominative, plural) · Thrācis(feminine, genitive, masculine, neuter, singular) · Thrācium(feminine, genitive, masculine, neuter, plural) · Thrācī(dative, feminine, masculine, neuter, singular) · Thrācibus(dative, feminine, masculine, neuter, plural) · Thrācem(accusative, feminine, masculine, singular) · Thrāx(accusative, neuter, singular) · Thrācīs(accusative, feminine, masculine, plural) · Thrācēs(accusative, feminine, masculine, plural) · Thrācia(accusative, neuter, plural) · Thrācī(ablative, feminine, masculine, singular) · Thrāce(ablative, feminine, masculine, singular) · Thrācī(ablative, neuter, singular) · Thrācibus(ablative, feminine, masculine, neuter, plural) · Thrāx(feminine, masculine, neuter, singular, vocative) · Thrācēs(feminine, masculine, plural, vocative)
Source: Wiktionary — CC BY-SA 4.0