/ˈpʲiə.vɐ/
OriginFrom Proto-Indo-European *poyH-weh₂, and cognate with Ancient Greek πόα (póa, “grass”), Latvian pļava. Derksen originally derived the Proto-Indo-European formation further from *peh₂- (“to protect”), but later prefers a derivation from *peyh₂- (“to swell, be fat”).
Formspi̇́eva(canonical, feminine, stress-pattern-1) · pi̇́evos(plural) · pi̇́eva(nominative, singular) · pi̇́evos(nominative, plural) · pi̇́evos(genitive, singular) · pi̇́evų(genitive, plural) · pi̇́evai(dative, singular) · pi̇́evoms(dative, plural) · pi̇́evą(accusative, singular) · pi̇́evas(accusative, plural) · pi̇́eva(instrumental, singular) · pi̇́evomis(instrumental, plural) · pi̇́evoje(locative, singular) · pi̇́evose(locative, plural) · pi̇́eva(singular, vocative) · pi̇́evos(plural, vocative)
Source: Wiktionary — CC BY-SA 4.0