[āːrsts]
OriginFirst mentioned in 16th-century translations, borrowed from Middle High German arste or Middle Dutch aerste, both derived from Vulgar Latin archiāter, from Ancient Greek ἀρχιατρός (arkhiatrós, “chief physician”).
- declension-1, masculinedoctor, physician (a specialist with a medical education who treats patients)
“griezties pie ārsta” — to consult a doctor
“ārsts terapeits” — therapist doctor
“bērnu ārsts” — pediatrician (lit. children's doctor)
Formsārste(feminine) · ārsts(nominative, singular) · ārsti(nominative, plural) · ārsta(genitive, singular) · ārstu(genitive, plural) · ārstam(dative, singular) · ārstiem(dative, plural) · ārstu(accusative, singular) · ārstus(accusative, plural) · ārstu(instrumental, singular) · ārstiem(instrumental, plural) · ārstā(locative, singular) · ārstos(locative, plural) · ārst(singular, vocative) · ārsti(plural, vocative)
Source: Wiktionary — CC BY-SA 4.0