[ûːdɛns]
CilmeFrom Proto-Baltic *ūden- (or perhaps from Proto-Balto-Slavic *wandō), from the r/n-heteroclitic Proto-Indo-European noun *wódr̥, *wédōr, itself from a stem *wed- (“to moisten”).
In Latvian, only the n-form of the stem survived in ūdens, but the r-form can be seen in the related term ūdrs (“otter”). The lack of initial v in Latvian also suggests that a specific dialectal term was generalized: v-initial forms can still be found in geographic names (e.g. the river Vadakste, the word vads in its dialectal senses: creek, swampy forest, etc., and place names derived from it, like Mēnešvads, Alkšņa vads, etc.).
Cognates include Lithuanian vanduõ, dialectal unduõ, únduo, Old Prussian unds m, wundan n, Proto-Slavic *voda (Old Church Slavonic, Belarusian, Ukrainian, Bulgarian, Russian вода́ (vodá), Czech voda, Polish woda), Old Church Slavonic вѣдро (vědro, “small vessel”), Russian ведро́ (vedró, “bucket”), Ukrainian відро́ (vidró), Czech vědro, Polish wiadro, Proto-Germanic *watōr (Gothic 𐍅𐌰𐍄𐍉 (watō), Old High German wazzar, German Wasser, English water, wet), Hittite wātar (< *wódr̥), Sanskrit उदन् (udán), Ancient Greek ὕδωρ (húdōr), Latin unda (“wave”) (from *udn- with metathesis).
- declension-2, genitive, irregular, masculine, nominativewater (transparent liquid substance formed by hydrogen and oxygen; H₂O)
“smagais ūdens” — heavy water (hydrogen peroxyde, H₂O₂)
“ūdens molekula” — water molecule, H₂O
“tīrs, skaidrs ūdens” — clean, clear water
- declension-2, genitive, in-plural, irregular, masculinewaters (large amounts, large bodies of water)
“virszemes, sauszemes ūdeņi” — surface, land water (lit. waters)
“pazemes ūdeņi” — groundwater, underground water (lit. waters)
“ārstnieciskie ūdeņi” — healing waters (e.g., at a spa)
- declension-2, genitive, in-plural, irregular, masculinewater (a body, bodies of water with a specific use, or belonging to a specific region or country)
“zvejas ūdeņi” — fishing waters
“teritoriālie ūdeņi” — territorial waters
“iekšējie ūdeņi” — internal, inland waters
- declension-2, genitive, irregular, masculine, nominativewater, aquatic, aqua- (using, relating to water)
“ūdens terapija, diēta” — water therapy, diet
“ūdens dziednīca” — water (health) resort, spa
“ūdens apkure” — water heating
- declension-2, genitive, irregular, masculine, nominativewater, aquatic (relating to bodies of water)
“ūdens transports” — water transport
“ūdenssports” — water sports
“ūdensslēpes” — water skis
- declension-2, genitive, irregular, masculine, nominativewater, aquatic (which lives, is situated, in or near bodies of water, or in water-rich areas)
“ūdens augi, ūdensaugi” — aquatic plants
“ūdens lilija, ūdens roze, ūdensroze” — water lily
“ūdens zāle, ūdenszāle” — seaweed (lit. water weed)
- declension-2, genitive, irregular, masculine, nominativewater (a water solution containing also alcohol, oils, herbal extracts)
“sejas ūdens” — face water
“tualetes ūdens” — eau-de-toilette, eau-de-cologne
- colloquial, declension-2, genitive, irregular, masculinewatery, uninteresting, boring; empty, meaningless
“ūdens gabals” — piece of water (= contentless, excessively long text)
“tu slauc pareizu pienu, bet, mīļā māt, tavas meitas dzied dziesmas, kam ūdens klāt!” — you milk good milk, but, dear mother, your daughters sing songs that are covered with water
Formasūdens(nominative, singular) · ūdeņi(nominative, plural) · ūdens(genitive, singular) · ūdeņu(genitive, plural) · ūdenim(dative, singular) · ūdeņiem(dative, plural) · ūdeni(accusative, singular) · ūdeņus(accusative, plural) · ūdeni(instrumental, singular) · ūdeņiem(instrumental, plural) · ūdenī(locative, singular) · ūdeņos(locative, plural) · ūdeni(singular, vocative) · ūdeņi(plural, vocative)
Avots: Wiktionary