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Definition 2024
trusis
trusis
See also: trušis
Latin
Participle
trūsīs
- dative masculine plural of trūsus
- dative feminine plural of trūsus
- dative neuter plural of trūsus
- ablative masculine plural of trūsus
- ablative neuter plural of trūsus
- ablative feminine plural of trūsus
Latvian
Alternative forms
Etymology
A borrowing from Belarusian трусь (trus'), or perhaps from Polish truś. This word is first mentioned in 17th-century dictionaries as truš(s), later (18-19th centuries) in competition with other borrowings (kraliņš from Russian кролик (krolik) or kaninķenis, kaninķins from German Kaninchen). In the 19th century, the most frequent forms were trusis and trušis, also truše; only in the 20th century did the current form become dominant.[1]
Noun
trusis m (2nd declension)
- rabbit (esp. Oryctolagus cuniculus)
- mājas trusis ― domestic rabbit
- savvaļas trusis ― wild rabbit
- trušu vila ― rabbit fur
- trušu āda ― rabbit skin, leather
Declension
Declension of trusis (2nd declension)
Usage notes
In English, rabbit is the preferred word when one does not want to distingusih rabbits from hares; in Latvian, zaķis (“hare”) is preferred, and trusis (“rabbit”) is less frequent. (Note that the Latvian Easter Bunny is in fact the Easter Hare.)
Synonyms
- (obsolete terms) kaninķenis, kaninķins, kraliņš
Derived terms
See also
References
- ↑ Karulis, Konstantīns (1992), “trusis”, in Latviešu Etimoloģijas Vārdnīca (in Latvian), Rīga: AVOTS, ISBN 9984-700-12-7