A1 Expression 1분 분량

Zajtra

Tomorrow

The day after today.

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Dnes je pondelok, ____ bude utorok.

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Uvidíme sa ____.

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____ mám dôležité stretnutie.

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The word 'zajtra' in Slovak, meaning 'tomorrow', has a rich linguistic history rooted in Proto-Slavic. It is derived from the Proto-Slavic *za jutra, which literally translates to 'for morning' or 'after morning'. The prefix *za- in Proto-Slavic is a very common spatial and temporal prefix, indicating 'behind', 'after', or 'for'. It is cognate with similar prefixes in other Indo-European languages. The root *jutra refers to 'morning', and is the basis for words like 'ráno' (morning) in many Slavic languages, though its direct descendant for 'morning' in modern Slovak is 'ráno'. Over centuries, through processes of phonological change and grammaticalization, the phrase *za jutra evolved. The 'j' sound often underwent palatalization, and vowels shifted. The combination became a single adverb, losing its original prepositional and noun components as distinct units within the word. Similar constructions can be found in other Slavic languages, highlighting a common linguistic heritage: * **Czech:** zítra * **Polish:** jutro * **Slovenian:** jutri * **Croatian/Serbian:** sutra (from *sŭ-jutra, where *sŭ- means 'with' or 'at') These cognates demonstrate the shared innovation within Slavic languages to form the concept of 'tomorrow' using a combination of a prepositional element and a root related to 'morning'. The Slovak 'zajtra' specifically retains the *za- prefix, making its etymology particularly transparent when compared to some of its Slavic counterparts. In essence, 'zajtra' literally encapsulates the idea of the time period immediately following the morning of the current day, thus denoting the next day.

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