huria

Kikuyu

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /huɾia/

Verb

huria (infinitive kũhuria)

  1. to snatch

Etymology 2

Cf. kũhuria.[1]

Hinde (1904) records hurria as an equivalent of English rhinoceros in “Jogowini dialect” of Kikuyu.[2]

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /hùɾiǎ/
As for Tonal Class, Benson (1964) classifies this term into Class 2 with a disyllabic stem, together with kĩgunyũ, njagĩ, kiugũ, and so on.
  • (Kiambu)

Noun

huria class 9/10 (plural huria)

  1. rhinoceros

References

  1. “huria” in Benson, T.G. (1964). Kikuyu-English dictionary, p. 171. Oxford: Clarendon Press.
  2. Hinde, Hildegarde (1904). Vocabularies of the Kamba and Kikuyu languages of East Africa, pp. 5051. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
  3. Yukawa, Yasutoshi (1981). "A Tentative Tonal Analysis of Kikuyu Nouns: A Study of Limuru Dialect." In Journal of Asian and African Studies, No. 22, 75123.
  • Armstrong, Lilias E. (1940). The Phonetic and Tonal Structure of Kikuyu, p. 361. Rep. 1967. (Also in 2018 by Routledge).

Old Saxon

Alternative forms

Etymology

From Proto-West Germanic *hūʀiju (hire).

Noun

hūria f

  1. hire, rent

Derived terms

Descendants

  • Middle Low German: hüre, huere, hyre, hüer, hür
    • German Low German:
      Altmärkisch: Hü̂r
      Westphalian:
      Ravensbergisch: Huür
      Westmünsterländisch: Höier
    • German: Heuer
    • Danish: hyre
    • Norwegian: hyre
    • Swedish: hyra
    • Faroese: hýra
    • ? Estonian: üür
This article is issued from Wiktionary. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.