Russian

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Pronunciation

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Etymology 1

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Borrowed from Old Church Slavonic -ыи (-yi), displaced native -ой (-oj) in unstressed positions, from Proto-Slavic *-ъjь, Doublet of -о́й (-ój).

Alternative forms

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Suffix

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-ый (-yjm

  1. masculine nominative singular adjective ending
  2. masculine inanimate accusative singular adjective ending
Declension
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Etymology 2

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The same as Etymology 1.

Alternative forms

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Suffix

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-ый (-yj)

  1. -ed
    одно- (odno-, one)глаз (glaz, eye)-ый (-yj) → ‎одногла́зый (odnoglázyj, one-eyed)
    све́тлый (svétlyj, light)во́лос (vólos, hair)-ый (-yj) → ‎светловоло́сый (svetlovolósyj, light-haired)
    без- (bez-, without)зуб (zub, tooth)-ый (-yj) → ‎беззу́бый (bezzúbyj, toothless, literally no-toothed)
Usage notes
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  • This suffix is used particularly with two-part compounds, where the second part normally refers to a body part.
  • The stress is drawn onto the preceding syllable.
  • These adjectives consistently have short forms of accent pattern a.
  • The suffix has the variant -ий (-ij) used particularly after velars (к г х) due to Russian spelling rules.
Declension
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Derived terms
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