Abra: Difference between revisions

From The Languages of David J. Peterson
Jump to navigation Jump to search
No edit summary
(4 intermediate revisions by 2 users not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
{{lexeme|Astapori Valyrian}}
{{lexeme|Astapori Valyrian}}
===Etymology===
===Etymology===
From {{inh|asta|hval|ābra}}.
From {{inh|asta|hval|ābra}}.
Line 10: Line 9:
{{head|asta|noun|{{ast-cel-noun}}||plural|abri}}
{{head|asta|noun|{{ast-cel-noun}}||plural|abri}}


# woman
# woman{{AVexp|[[J']][[abra]] [[Vesterozia]] [[las]] [[kreni]], [[y]] [[ivetras]] [[dori]] [[rije]] [[vaghoma]] [[gidhmilas]] [[qova]] [[j']][[odre]].|The Westerosi '''woman''' is pleased but speaks no praise to keep the price down.|Missandei|3|02}}
# wife


=====Translations=====
=====Translations=====
{{tlist-woman}}
{{tlist-woman}}


{{C|asta|Female people}}
{{C|asta|Female people|Swadesh list}}

Revision as of 00:25, 30 April 2024

Astapori Valyrian

Etymology

From High Valyrian ābra.

Pronunciation

IPA(key): /ˈabɾa/

Noun

abra (celestial, plural abri)

  1. woman
    J'abra Vesterozia las kreni, y ivetras dori rije vaghoma gidhmilas qova j'odre.
    The Westerosi woman is pleased but speaks no praise to keep the price down.
    -Missandei (Game of Thrones, Episode 302)
  2. wife
Translations