болꙗринъ
Old Church Slavonic
editEtymology
editPerhaps from Proto-Slavic *bojь (“struggle, fight”), or related to *bol (“great”), found in the first element of большой (bolʹšoj, “great”).[1] (Can this(+) etymology be sourced?)
Watkins instead proposes a Bulgar origin, from ΒΟΥΗΛΑ (bouēla), *boyla-er (“nobleman”), noting also Old Turkic 𐰉𐰆𐰖𐰞𐰀 (boyla, buyla)[2] (Can this(+) etymology be sourced?)
Noun
editболꙗринъ • (boljarinŭ) m
- aristocrat, nobleman, boyar
- from the Homily against the Bogumils, 1643-1649:
- хоулѧще богатꙑѩ, царь ненавидѧтъ, рѫгаѭтъ сѧ старѣишинамъ, оукарꙗѭтъ болꙗрꙑ, мрьзькꙑ богоу мьнѧтъ работаѭщѧѩ цѣсарю, и вьсꙗкомоу рабоу не велѧтъ работати господиноу своѥмоу.
- xulęšte bogatyję, carĭ nenavidętŭ, rǫgajǫtŭ sę starěišinamŭ, ukarjajǫtŭ boljary, mrĭzĭky bogu mĭnętŭ rabotajǫštęję cěsarju, i vĭsjakomu rabu ne velętŭ rabotati gospodinu svojemu.
- They scorn the rich, they hate the Tsars, they ridicule their superiors, they reproach the boyars, they believe that God looks in horror on those who labour for the Tsar, and advise every serf not to work for his master.
- from the Homily against the Bogumils, 1643-1649:
Declension
editDeclension of болꙗринъ (o-stem)
singular | dual | plural | |
---|---|---|---|
nominative | болꙗринъ boljarinŭ |
болꙗрина boljarina |
болꙗре boljare |
genitive | болꙗрина boljarina |
болꙗриноу boljarinu |
болꙗръ boljarŭ |
dative | болꙗриноу boljarinu |
болꙗринома boljarinoma |
болꙗрьмъ boljarĭmŭ |
accusative | болꙗринъ boljarinŭ |
болꙗрина boljarina |
болꙗрꙑ boljary |
instrumental | болꙗриномь boljarinomĭ |
болꙗринома boljarinoma |
болꙗрꙑ boljary |
locative | болꙗринѣ boljarině |
болꙗриноу boljarinu |
болꙗрьхъ boljarĭxŭ |
vocative | болꙗрине boljarine |
болꙗрина boljarina |
болꙗре boljare |
References
edit- ^ Douglas Harper (2001–2024) “boyar”, in Online Etymology Dictionary.
- ^ “boyar”, in The American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language, 5th edition, Boston, Mass.: Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, 2016, →ISBN.
Categories:
- Old Church Slavonic terms inherited from Proto-Slavic
- Old Church Slavonic terms derived from Proto-Slavic
- Old Church Slavonic terms derived from Bulgar
- Old Church Slavonic lemmas
- Old Church Slavonic nouns
- Old Church Slavonic masculine nouns
- Old Church Slavonic terms with quotations
- Old Church Slavonic hard o-stem nouns
- Old Church Slavonic hard masculine o-stem nouns