[ˈn̪ä̌ːɡɐs̪]
OriginFrom Proto-Balto-Slavic *nágas, from Proto-Indo-European *h₃nṓgʰs (“nail”). Cognate with Latvian nags (“nail, claw”); see also nagà (“hoof”).
- fingernail, nail
“piršto nagas - a fingernail”
- claw
“katės/šuns nagai” — cat's/dog's claws
- talon
“paukščio nagai” — talons of a bird
- in-pluralfingertips
“Nagus gelia.” — The fingertips sore.
- tip (of a rake etc.)
- figurativelystingy person, miser
“Jis toks nagas. - He is such a miser.”
- accusative, form-of, pluralaccusative plural of naga
Formsnãgas(canonical, masculine, stress-pattern-4) · nagai̇̃(plural) · nãgas(nominative, singular) · nagai̇̃(nominative, plural) · nãgo(genitive, singular) · nagų̃(genitive, plural) · nãgui(dative, singular) · nagáms(dative, plural) · nãgą(accusative, singular) · nagùs(accusative, plural) · nagù(instrumental, singular) · nagai̇̃s(instrumental, plural) · nagè(locative, singular) · naguosè(locative, plural) · nãge(singular, vocative) · nagai̇̃(plural, vocative) · nagàs(canonical, feminine)
Source: Wiktionary — CC BY-SA 4.0