Contionary:til: Difference between revisions

From Linguifex
Jump to navigation Jump to search
Melinoë (talk | contribs)
Melinoë (talk | contribs)
Line 68: Line 68:


==[[Scots Norse]]==
==[[Scots Norse]]==
===Etymology ===
===Pronunciation===
From {{der|snon|non|til|p=i}}, from {{der|snon|gem-pro|*tilą|p=i}}.
*{{IPA+|snon|/ˈt͡ʃɪʎ/|a=ST}}
 
*{{IPA+|snon|/ˈt͡ʃɛʎ/|a=UB}}
The meaning of "too" is under English influence, despite having existed in Old Norse, it is unrelated.
*{{IPA+|snon|/ˈt͡ʃɛj/|a=LH}}
====Pronunciation====
*{{IPA+|snon|/tʲɪʎ/|a=EA}}
{{IPA link|Standard|Scots Norse}} /ˈtʲɪʎ/
===Etymology===
====Preposition====
{{snon-inh|til|tilą}} The meaning of "too" is under English influence, despite having existed in Old Norse, it is unrelated.
===Preposition===
{{head|snon|preposition}}
{{head|snon|preposition}}
#to, towards (with genitive)
#to, towards (with genitive)
#{{lb|snon|under English influence}} too
#{{lb|snon|under English influence}} too
#:{{ux|snon|mèl '''til''' mìchal|to speak '''too''' much}}
#:{{ux|snon|mèl '''til''' mìchil|to speak '''too''' much}}
=====Usage notes=====
====Usage notes====
This term is never used as the "to" for an infinitive, which is most often marked solely through verb form. For the infinitive "to", see {{lang|snon|{{term|to}}}} and {{lang|snon|{{term|tu}}}}
For the infinitive "to", see {{lang|snon|to}} and {{l|snon|tu}}
=====Declension=====
====Inflection====
{{snon-infl-prep|til|3=tiol}}
{{snon-infl-prep|til}}
===Mutation===
===Mutation===
{{snon-mut}}
{{snon-mut}}

Revision as of 17:58, 7 May 2026

Hakdor

Pronunciation

Adjective

til

  1. thin

Antonyms

Qasunattuuji

Pronunciation

Etymology

From Proto-Indo-European *delh₁

Verb

til

  1. (transitive) to defeat

Skundavisk

Etymology 1

From Middle Skundavisk til, from Old Skundavisk til, from Halmisk ᛏᛁᛚ (til), ᛏᛁᛚᛖ (tile), from Proto-Germanic *tilą.

Pronunciation

Noun

til n. (class 3c, genitive tils, plural tile)

  1. goal, target
    Een leerer werþen was mijn grøteste til.
    Becoming a teacher was my biggest goal.

Usage notes

Synonyms

Derived terms

Related terms

Etymology 2

From Middle Skundavisk til, from Old Skundavisk til, from Old Norse til, from the same Proto-Germanic root as Etymology 1. The proposition usage arose around the Old Skundavisk time due to Old Norse influence, and was reinforced by the later Danish influence of the 16th century.

Pronunciation

Preposition

til

  1. til, until
    Ji mootet til ðe daniske targe drijven.
    You must drive until the Danish border.
  2. to, towards (the direction or goal of a movement or action)
    Hise beaghting was til Odward gerightet.
    His attention was directed towards Odward.

Usage notes

Synonyms

Derived terms

Related terms


Scots Norse

Pronunciation

Etymology

From Old Norse til, from Proto-Germanic *tilą. The meaning of "too" is under English influence, despite having existed in Old Norse, it is unrelated.

Preposition

til

  1. to, towards (with genitive)
  2. (under English influence) too
    mèl til mìchil
    to speak too much

Usage notes

For the infinitive "to", see to and tu

Inflection

Inflection of til
1st 2nd 3rd
singular tilg tilth tilhaᶰ
plural tilvt tiltt tiltì

ᶰ: triggers eclipsis

Mutation

Mutated forms of til
radical lenition eclipsis
til thil dil

Note: Certain mutated forms of some words can never occur in standard Scots Norse.
All possible mutated forms are displayed for convenience.