[ˈrɪnʋɐ]
OriginFrom Polish rynwa, a dialectal form of rynna, from Middle High German rinne.
- a pipe or trough intended for drainage of water; gutter, leader, or eavestrough
Formsри́нва(canonical, feminine, inanimate) · rýnva(romanization) · ри́нви(genitive) · ри́нви(nominative, plural) · ринв(genitive, plural) · ри́нва(nominative, singular) · ри́нви(genitive, singular) · ри́нві(dative, singular) · ри́нвам(dative, plural) · ри́нву(accusative, singular) · ри́нви(accusative, plural) · ри́нвою(instrumental, singular) · ри́нвами(instrumental, plural) · ри́нві(locative, singular) · ри́нвах(locative, plural) · ри́нво(singular, vocative) · ри́нви(plural, vocative)
Source: Wiktionary — CC BY-SA 4.0