[tɐˈɫɔn]
ПоходженняBorrowed from French talon (“heel, spur”) (evolved from Vulgar Latin *tālōnis), originally a partitive of Latin tālus (“ankle”) + -он (-on). Initially, the word referred to printed forms attached to a (bearer) bond, which the holder could use in order to require new physical copies of the bond's coupons.
- ticket, card, pass
“посадко́вий тало́н” — boarding pass
- counterfoil
- coupon, voucher
- slip, note
Формитало́н(canonical, inanimate, masculine) · talón(romanization) · тало́на(genitive) · тало́ни(nominative, plural) · тало́нів(genitive, plural) · тало́н(nominative, singular) · тало́на(genitive, singular) · тало́нові(dative, singular) · тало́ну(dative, singular) · тало́нам(dative, plural) · тало́н(accusative, singular) · тало́ни(accusative, plural) · тало́ном(instrumental, singular) · тало́нами(instrumental, plural) · тало́ні(locative, singular) · тало́нах(locative, plural) · тало́не(singular, vocative) · тало́ни(plural, vocative)
Джерело: Wiktionary