Aija
See also: äijä
Finnish
Etymology
From a pet form of Aili, Aino, Alli, Anja and Arja. First recorded as a formal given name in Finland during 1890-1894.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): [ˈɑijːɑ]
- Rhymes: -ɑijːɑ
- Hyphenation: Ai‧ja
Declension
| Inflection of Aija (Kotus type 9/kala, no gradation) | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| nominative | Aija | Aijat | |
| genitive | Aijan | Aijojen | |
| partitive | Aijaa | Aijoja | |
| illative | Aijaan | Aijoihin | |
| singular | plural | ||
| nominative | Aija | Aijat | |
| accusative | nom. | Aija | Aijat |
| gen. | Aijan | ||
| genitive | Aijan | Aijojen Aijainrare | |
| partitive | Aijaa | Aijoja | |
| inessive | Aijassa | Aijoissa | |
| elative | Aijasta | Aijoista | |
| illative | Aijaan | Aijoihin | |
| adessive | Aijalla | Aijoilla | |
| ablative | Aijalta | Aijoilta | |
| allative | Aijalle | Aijoille | |
| essive | Aijana | Aijoina | |
| translative | Aijaksi | Aijoiksi | |
| instructive | — | Aijoin | |
| abessive | Aijatta | Aijoitta | |
| comitative | — | Aijoineen | |
Latvian
Etymology
First recorded as a given name of Latvians in early 20th century. Name of a character in the novel Aija (1911) by Jānis Jaunsudrabiņš. Associated with aijāt (“to rock, lull”) and aijas (“cradle”).
This article is issued from Wiktionary. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.