-u

Etymology
Suffixed definite article attached on nouns ending with k, g. From the ending. cognate to 🇨🇬.

Related to 🇨🇬, 🇨🇬.

Article

 * : the
 * (note: shifts towards   among some Gheg dialects;  instead of )
 * (note: shifts towards   among some Gheg dialects;  instead of )
 * (note: shifts towards   among some Gheg dialects;  instead of )
 * (note: shifts towards   among some Gheg dialects;  instead of )
 * (note: shifts towards   among some Gheg dialects;  instead of )

Suffix

 * 1) out, outwards;

Etymology 1
Etymology unclear. Perhaps from the Greek -ou imperative (pronounced ) of verbs such as dekhou “receive!”, or from the Hebrew imperative -û. It may instead—or also—be connected to the vowel of the Esperanto conditional suffix, minus the s of the indicative inflections.

Etymology 2
Apparently connected to the u at the end of.

Suffix

 * 1) -one. (Ending of the individual correlatives.)

Etymology
From (as applied to stems ending in -e). Cognate with 🇨🇬.

Suffix

 * jagama "to divide" → jagu "a part, a share"
 * kaduma "to disappear" → kadu "loss, losing"
 * sise- "inside" → sisu "content"
 * pesema "to wash" → pesu "wash, washing"
 * pesema "to wash" → pesu "wash, washing"

Etymology
From, from (as applied to stems ending in -e). Cognate with 🇨🇬.

Usage notes
The front-harmonic variant is only used when the first vowel of the word is one of the harmonic front vowels, , ; words beginning with neutral front vowels  take the back-harmonic variant.

Etymology
.

Suffix

 * 1) be
 * Ukiuuvoq.
 * It is winter.
 * It is winter.

Usage notes
May become additive after a strong q base.

Etymology
Common vowel found in pronouns in Romance languages:, and , also in  and as an o in  and , etc. (Compare  and )

Usage notes
As it is used to form pronouns, you cannot use it to create nouns. Instead, to form an agent from an adjective like, you just make it a noun:.

Suffix

 * 1) used to form nouns denoting action or result of action

Etymology
From.

Suffix

 * : his, him

Etymology 1
From. Cognate with 🇨🇬.

Etymology
From suppletive fusion of Old English ō-stem feminine ending and. Akin to Gothic feminine abstracts in (compare ; ).

Usage notes
According to Ringe and Taylor, this suffix began as indeclinable *-i in the singular and nominative/accusative plural, before the ō-stem feminine nominative singular was borrowed. In Anglian, the new ending was then extended to the rest of these forms. This same extension was not complete in Early West Saxon, but eventually won out in Late West Saxon. Spellings of these forms with -o, and rarely -a, reflect the merger of unstressed back vowels in later Old English

Etymology
From.

Suffix

 * 1) Masculine singular agreement suffix

Suffix

 * 1) Masculine nominative/singular agreement suffix

Suffix

 * , always used in conjunction with 

Etymology 1
Accusative suffix.

Etymology 2
Possessive suffix.

Etymology 3
Derivative suffix.

Etymology
From, from.

Usage notes
This suffix is mostly used where the vowel in the last syllable is a, ae, e, or y.