/ˈɾʲæ̌ːtɐs/
OriginFrom Proto-Balto-Slavic *retas, *redas. Cognate with Latvian rȩts, rēds (“sparse, rare”) and Proto-Slavic *rědъkъ.
- thin, sparse
- rare, uncommon
- few (used with singular nouns)
“retà dienà neskaũda kójų” — there are few days when my feet don't ache
- slow, immobile
Formsrẽtas(canonical, masculine, stress-pattern-4) · retà(feminine) · rẽta(neuter) · rẽta(neuter, positive) · rẽtas(masculine, nominative, singular) · reti̇̀(masculine, nominative, plural, positive) · retà(feminine, nominative, positive, singular) · rẽtos(feminine, nominative, plural, positive) · rẽto(genitive, masculine, singular) · retų̃(genitive, masculine, plural, positive) · retõs(feminine, genitive, positive, singular) · retų̃(feminine, genitive, plural, positive) · retám(dative, masculine, singular) · reti̇́ems(dative, masculine, plural, positive) · rẽtai(dative, feminine, positive, singular) · retóms(dative, feminine, plural, positive) · rẽtą(accusative, masculine, singular) · retùs(accusative, masculine, plural, positive) · rẽtą(accusative, feminine, positive, singular) · retàs(accusative, feminine, plural, positive)
Source: Wiktionary — CC BY-SA 4.0