[ˈkaːɾɐs]
OriginFrom Proto-Baltic *karjas, from Proto-Indo-European *kóryos (“war, troops”), from the root *ker- (“army”). Cognate with Latvian karš (“war”), Old Prussian kargis (“troops, army”).
- war (conflict involving organized use of arms)
Formskãras(canonical, masculine, stress-pattern-4) · karai̇̃(plural) · kãras(nominative, singular) · karai̇̃(nominative, plural) · kãro(genitive, singular) · karų̃(genitive, plural) · kãrui(dative, singular) · karáms(dative, plural) · kãrą(accusative, singular) · karùs(accusative, plural) · karù(instrumental, singular) · karai̇̃s(instrumental, plural) · karè(locative, singular) · karuosè(locative, plural) · kãre(singular, vocative) · karai̇̃(plural, vocative) · kãrias(alternative)