/vʲɪˈd̪ʊs̪/
OriginFrom Proto-Balto-Slavic *widús (probably originally meaning separated, rural) presumably from Proto-Indo-European *weydʰ- (“to divide, wooded”). Cognate with Latvian vidus, Old Prussian widus (“boot stitch”). Further akin to Proto-Germanic *widuz (“wood”), Proto-Celtic *widus (“tree”), possibly Bulgarian Ви́дима (Vídima) (river in Central Bulgaria).
Formsvidùs(canonical, masculine, stress-pattern-4) · vi̇̃dūs(plural) · vidùs(nominative, singular) · vi̇̃dūs(nominative, plural) · vidaũs(genitive, singular) · vidų̃(genitive, plural) · vi̇̃dui(dative, singular) · vidùms(dative, plural) · vi̇̃dų(accusative, singular) · vidùs(accusative, plural) · vidumi̇̀(instrumental, singular) · vidumi̇̀s(instrumental, plural) · vidujè(locative, singular) · viduosè(locative, plural) · vidaũ(singular, vocative) · vi̇̃dūs(plural, vocative)
Source: Wiktionary — CC BY-SA 4.0