OriginFrom Latin ānus (“anus”) + -āls. Clearly not derived as such in Latvian, but borrowed and adapted from another European language.
- anal (of or relating to the anus)
“no ienaidniekiem sesks mēdz aizsargāties, izdalot anālo dziedzeru sekrētu, kam ir ļoti stipra, nepatīkama smaka” — the ferret usually defends himself against his enemies by excreting anal secretions with a very strong, unpleasant odor
Formsanālais(definite) · anālāks(comparative) · visanālākais(superlative) · anāli(adverb) · anāls(masculine, nominative, singular) · anāli(masculine, nominative, plural) · anāla(feminine, nominative, singular) · anālas(feminine, nominative, plural) · anāla(genitive, masculine, singular) · anālu(genitive, masculine, plural) · anālas(feminine, genitive, singular) · anālu(feminine, genitive, plural) · anālam(dative, masculine, singular) · anāliem(dative, masculine, plural) · anālai(dative, feminine, singular) · anālām(dative, feminine, plural) · anālu(accusative, masculine, singular) · anālus(accusative, masculine, plural) · anālu(accusative, feminine, singular) · anālas(accusative, feminine, plural)
Source: Wiktionary — CC BY-SA 4.0