/ˈsäː.vɐs/
OriginUltimately from Proto-Indo-European *swé (“self”). Within Baltic, cognate with Latvian savs, Latgalian sovs, Lithuanian svetimas, Lithuanian svečias.
- dialectaltheir, own
“Ji pasiūlė savas idėjas” — She suggested her (foreign, strange) ideas.
Formssãvas(canonical, masculine) · sãva(neuter, positive) · sãvas(masculine, nominative, singular) · savi̇̀(masculine, nominative, plural, positive) · savà(feminine, nominative, positive, singular) · sãvos(feminine, nominative, plural, positive) · sãvo(genitive, masculine, singular) · savų̃(genitive, masculine, plural, positive) · savõs(feminine, genitive, positive, singular) · savų̃(feminine, genitive, plural, positive) · savám(dative, masculine, singular) · savi̇́ems(dative, masculine, plural, positive) · sãvai(dative, feminine, positive, singular) · savóms(dative, feminine, plural, positive) · sãvą(accusative, masculine, singular) · savùs(accusative, masculine, plural, positive) · sãvą(accusative, feminine, positive, singular) · savàs(accusative, feminine, plural, positive) · savù(instrumental, masculine, singular) · savai̇̃s(instrumental, masculine, plural, positive)
Source: Wiktionary — CC BY-SA 4.0