FromProto-Albanian*madza, fromProto-Indo-European*méǵh₂-.[1][2]
i madh (femininee madhe,masculine pluraltë mëdhenj,feminine pluraltë mëdha)
FromProto-Albanian*maθ-, fromProto-Indo-European*mh₂sd-(“fat, feed, fodder”). Cognate toOld High Germanmast(“fodder, feeding, fattening”).(Canthis(+) etymology besourced? Particularly: “madh”)
madh m
| Arabic (Yangi Imlo) | مەدھ |
|---|---|
| Cyrillic | мадҳ |
| Latin | madh |
| Afghan Uzbek | مدح |
Borrowed fromArabicمَدْح(madḥ).
madh (pluralmadhlar)
| singular | plural | |
|---|---|---|
| nominative | madh | madhlar |
| genitive | madhning | madhlarning |
| dative | madhga | madhlarga |
| definite accusative | madhni | madhlarni |
| locative | madhda | madhlarda |
| ablative | madhdan | madhlardan |
| similative | madhdek | madhlardek |