/ˈpuʃkə/
OrigineBorrowed from Hungarian puska or Polish puszka, both being derived from Czech puška, inevitably from Old High German būhse, from Latin pyxis, from Ancient Greek πυξίς (puxís).
Compare Serbo-Croatian puška, Czech and Slovak puška, Russian пушка (puška), Albanian pushkë
Formepuști(plural) · pușcă(accusative, indefinite, nominative, singular) · pușca(accusative, definite, nominative, singular) · puști(accusative, indefinite, nominative, plural) · puștile(accusative, definite, nominative, plural) · puști(dative, genitive, indefinite, singular) · puștii(dative, definite, genitive, singular) · puști(dative, genitive, indefinite, plural) · puștilor(dative, definite, genitive, plural) · pușcă(singular, vocative) · pușco(singular, vocative) · puștilor(plural, vocative) · lui Pușcă(dative, genitive)