[ubaks]
OriginBorrowed from Old East Slavic убогъ (ubogŭ, “poor”) (cf. Old Church Slavonic убогъ (ubogŭ, “beggar”), and also Russian убогий (ubogij, “very poor; crippled”)), first attested in 17th-century dictionaries. The basic Slavic stem of this word is the same as in nabags (q.v.).
- declension-1, masculinebeggar (man who obtains his livelihood by begging)
“ubaga tarba” — beggar's sack, pan
“ubaga dāvana” — donation to beggar(s), alms
“lūgt ubaga dāvanas” — to ask for alms (lit. beggar's donations), to beg
Formsubadze(feminine) · ubags(nominative, singular) · ubagi(nominative, plural) · ubaga(genitive, singular) · ubagu(genitive, plural) · ubagam(dative, singular) · ubagiem(dative, plural) · ubagu(accusative, singular) · ubagus(accusative, plural) · ubagu(instrumental, singular) · ubagiem(instrumental, plural) · ubagā(locative, singular) · ubagos(locative, plural) · ubag(singular, vocative) · ubagi(plural, vocative)
Source: Wiktionary — CC BY-SA 4.0