[{"data":1,"prerenderedAt":-1},["ShallowReactive",2],{"word--uus":3},{"word":4,"glossSources":11,"senses":13,"sensesFi":19,"frequency":8,"etymologies":20,"etymologyFi":8,"etymologyFiLinks":8,"synonymsByPos":23,"extendedSynonymsByPos":24,"antonyms":25,"hypernyms":26,"hyponyms":27,"englishTranslations":28,"wordnetGlosses":29,"fiSynonyms":30,"fiExtendedSynonyms":31,"fiAntonyms":32,"fiExtendedAntonyms":33,"fiBaseWords":34,"fiBaseWordsGuessed":10,"fiDerivedFrom":35,"fiCompounds":36,"fiDerived":37,"fiRelated":38,"fiTranslations":40,"exampleSentences":41,"inflectionForms":8,"allInflectionForms":8,"rhymePattern":8,"rhymeSamples":42},{"id":5,"lemma":6,"pos":7,"kotusClass":8,"kotusGradation":8,"homonymIndex":8,"ipa":9,"isStub":10},111535,"-uus","suffix",null,"/-uːs/",false,{"enWiktionary":12,"fiWiktionary":10,"wordnet":10,"aiGeneratedEn":10,"finnWordNet":10,"psychling":10,"termipankki":10},true,[14],{"index":15,"parentIndex":8,"gloss":16,"glossLinks":8,"tags":17},0,"Forms nouns from adjectives or other nouns, expressing a quality of being that which is described: -ness, -hood, -ity, -th, -ship",[18],"morpheme",[],[21],{"pos":8,"text":22,"links":8},"From Proto-Finnic *-uc ~ *-uuc; traditionally it has been argued that the short vowel is original, and that the development of the suffix has been significantly influenced by analogy (see details below); however, a long vowel has also been proposed as primary.\nAnalogical developments of the declension, based on SKRK\n* The oblique plural forms originally declined like those of the käsi type, but were replaced by plurals in -ks- from the type 39 (vastaus) declension, formed on the analogy of the suffix -s.\n** Words that had acquired a nominal sense early on have crossed over entirely to type 39 (vastaus): e.g. sisarus (“sibling”), originally a semantic extension from *sisarus > sisaruus (“siblinghood”); vanhus (“old person”), originally a semantic extension from *vanhus > vanhuus (“oldness”).\n* The long vowel appearing after consonants originates from a contraction *-ude- > *-ue- > -uu- in the genitive singular and nominative plural of bisyllabic stems, in which the third-syllable unstressed e was assimilated. This was generalized to other case forms of such words as well.\n* In trisyllabic stems such as korkea → korkeus, rakas → rakkaus, the suffix would in all inflected forms gain secondary stress, preventing the loss of *-d-. From here *-d- was then reintroduced in the gen. sg. and nom. pl. of bisyllabic stems.\n* Root-final consonants in trisyllabic stems were by contrast often lost (e.g. *korkeduden > korkeuden, *rakkahuden > rakkauden), leading to the regular retention of short -u- especially after vowels.\n** The rare exceptions to this such as sisar → sisaruus have however also acquired the long-vowel allomorph.",[],[],[],[],[],[],[],[],[],[],[],[],[],[],[],[39],"ominaisuudennimi",{},[],[]]