svabads

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Latvian[edit]

Etymology[edit]

Borrowed from Old East Slavic свободь (svobodĭ) (compare Russian свобо́да (svobóda, freedom)), first mentioned in 16th-century texts.

A minority opinion is that it might actually be a native Baltic word, perhaps from the same source as the verb atsvabināt (to free, to release)[1] and thus from the same Proto-Balto-Slavic form as the Slavic counterpart, i.e. *swabadas.

Adjective[edit]

svabads (definite svabadais, comparative svabadāks, superlative vissvabadākais, adverb svabadi)

  1. (dated, now usually brīvs) free (not in (political, economical, juridical, social) dependence)
    mūsu vectēvs stāstīja, ka vecvecos laikos mūsu tauta, zemnieki, bijusi svabadaour grandfather told us that in the olden days our people, farmers, were free
  2. (dated, now usually brīvs) free (not constrained by obligations, duties, worries)
    pēc kartupeļiem visu vakaru esmu atkal svabadsafter (peeling) the potatoes I will be again free all evening
  3. (dated, now usually brīvs) free (not prohibited or limited, happening without hindrance, comfortable)
    svabada rīcībafree action
    pasažieru vairums bija kāda būvbrigāde, kura izkāpa Ugālē, un autobusā kļuva pavisam svabadimost of the passengers were (part of) a builders' brigade which got off at Ugāle, and the bus became completely free
  4. (dated, now usually brīvs) free, open, natural, not artificial
    viegli un svabadi Daugavas viļņithe light and free waves of the Daugava (river)
  5. (dated, now usually brīvs) free (not taken, not occupied)
    viņi nosēdās uz vēl svabadā sola pašā priekšāthey sat on a still free bench at the front
    svabads laiksfree time
  6. (dated, now usually brīvs) free, loose, untied
    aizeju pie zirga un palaižu viņa glavas pavadu svabadākI go to the horse and let his head freer (from the reins)
  7. (dated) tired, weak, without strength
    saules karstumā sienu pļaudams, viņš palicis gluži svabadscutting hay under the heat of the sun, he became quite tired, weak

Declension[edit]

Synonyms[edit]

Derived terms[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ Karulis, Konstantīns (1992) “svabads”, in Latviešu Etimoloģijas Vārdnīca (in Latvian), Rīga: AVOTS, →ISBN