[pānna]
CilmeBorrowed from Middle High German panne, or maybe from Middle Dutch panne (cf. German Pfanne), or from Swedish panna, themselves borrowings from Latin patina (> *patna), from Ancient Greek πατάνη (patánē, “bowl, basin”), itself probably of Illyrian origin. In Latvian, panna is first mentioned in 17th-century dictionaries.
- declension-4, femininepan (flat metal container, usually with a handle, used for cooking over fire, on a stove, or over a hot surface; also, a rectangular plate with raised sides for use in a baking oven)
“čuguna panna” — cast-iron pan
“vafeļu panna” — waffle pan, waffle iron
“pannas rokturis, kāts” — pan handle
- declension-4, femininethe contents of a pan; a pan together with its contents
“maiznieks patlaban kāpa augšā no cepļa pagraba ar brūnu kliņģerīšu pannu uz galvas” — the baker is coming back up from the baking cellar with a brown pan of marigolds on (his) head
“salasījām labi daudz sēņu; tad devāmies uz mājām... un tūlīt sacepām veselu pannu” — we gathered very many mushrooms; then we went home... and immediately cooked a whole pan (of mushrooms)
Formaspanna(nominative, singular) · pannas(nominative, plural) · pannas(genitive, singular) · pannu(genitive, plural) · pannai(dative, singular) · pannām(dative, plural) · pannu(accusative, singular) · pannas(accusative, plural) · pannu(instrumental, singular) · pannām(instrumental, plural) · pannā(locative, singular) · pannās(locative, plural) · panna(singular, vocative) · pannas(plural, vocative)
Avots: Wiktionary