[{"data":1,"prerenderedAt":-1},["ShallowReactive",2],{"word-kymi":3},{"word":4,"glossSources":12,"senses":14,"sensesFi":30,"frequency":42,"etymologies":53,"etymologyFi":9,"etymologyFiLinks":9,"synonymsByPos":60,"extendedSynonymsByPos":61,"antonyms":62,"hypernyms":63,"hyponyms":64,"englishTranslations":65,"wordnetGlosses":66,"fiSynonyms":67,"fiExtendedSynonyms":70,"fiAntonyms":72,"fiExtendedAntonyms":73,"fiBaseWords":74,"fiBaseWordsGuessed":11,"fiDerivedFrom":75,"fiCompounds":76,"fiDerived":77,"fiRelated":78,"fiTranslations":80,"exampleSentences":81,"inflectionForms":101,"allInflectionForms":114,"rhymePattern":145,"rhymeSamples":146},{"id":5,"lemma":6,"pos":7,"kotusClass":8,"kotusGradation":9,"homonymIndex":9,"ipa":10,"isStub":11},231673,"kymi","name, noun",7,null,"/ˈkymi/",false,{"enWiktionary":13,"fiWiktionary":13,"wordnet":11,"aiGeneratedEn":11,"finnWordNet":11,"psychling":13,"termipankki":11},true,[15,20,26],{"index":16,"parentIndex":9,"gloss":17,"glossLinks":9,"tags":18},0,"wide, large river",[19],"literary",{"index":16,"parentIndex":9,"gloss":21,"glossLinks":22,"tags":25},"synonym of Kymijoki",[23],{"text":24,"target":24},"Kymijoki",[],{"index":27,"parentIndex":9,"gloss":28,"glossLinks":9,"tags":29},1,"a former municipality of Kymenlaakso, Finland; merged with Kotka in 1977.",[],[31],{"index":16,"parentIndex":9,"glossFi":32,"glossFiLinks":33,"examplesFi":9,"tags":40,"source":41},"leveä, mahtava joki",[34,36,38],{"text":35,"target":35},"leveä",{"text":37,"target":37},"mahtava",{"text":39,"target":39},"joki",[],"fiwiktionary",{"totalAbs":43,"totalRelative":44,"avgRelative":45,"corpora":46},17705,6.7456846,16.819813,{"s24":47,"klk":48,"lehdet":49,"wiki":50,"reddit":51,"opensub":52},3.9103105,48.00261,30.074476,17.57924,1.3019,0.05033841,[54,57],{"pos":55,"text":56,"links":9},"name","Uncertain. The name is connected to the word kymi (“big river”), but this has likely developed from the name rather than the other way around. Koivulehto (1987) suggests borrowing from Proto-Germanic *kwēmijaz (“easily accessible”); Rahkonen (2013) considers this unlikely for semantic reasons and considers the word as ultimately being a variant of Kemi, which he derives from Proto-Finno-Permic *käme through a substrate.",{"pos":58,"text":59,"links":9},"noun","Probably from Kymi, the name of a major river.",[],[],[],[],[],[],[],[68,69],"kemi","virta",[71,39],"virtaus",[],[],[],[],[],[],[79],"uittoväylä",{},[82,90,97],{"paragraph":83,"matchedForm":84,"matchOffset":85,"bookId":86,"bookTitle":87,"bookAuthor":88,"bookSlug":89},"Jo v. 1712 tuli Venäläinen sotajoukko, 16,000-miehen suuruinen Suomeen, mutta se onneksi palasi syyskuussa takaisin, vaikka Lybecker jo oli aikeessa Kymi-joelta peräytyä heidän tieltään.","Kymi",149,"1390","Pietari Suuri","K. O. Lindeqvist","1390-lindeqvist-k-o-pietari-suuri",{"paragraph":91,"matchedForm":6,"matchOffset":92,"bookId":93,"bookTitle":94,"bookAuthor":95,"bookSlug":96},"Terät liitävät kirsikkapuista, Ja virta vieno ne vie.\nSe tyynine suvantoineen Mun onneni kymi lie.",89,"283","Runoja","Valter Juva","283-juva-valter-runoja",{"paragraph":98,"matchedForm":6,"matchOffset":99,"bookId":100,"bookTitle":24,"bookAuthor":9,"bookSlug":9},"Lopulta  vain  sanoilla  virta  ja  kymi  tarkoitettiin  1800 -luvun  yleiskielessä  suurta  jokea,  kun  taas  muut  tarkentavat  sanat  jäivät  elämään  maantieteen  sanastossa.",36,"https://fi.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kymijoki",{"type":102,"essive_sg":103,"elative_sg":104,"abessive_sg":105,"ablative_sg":106,"adessive_sg":107,"allative_sg":108,"genitive_sg":109,"illative_sg":110,"inessive_sg":111,"partitive_sg":112,"accusative_sg":109,"nominative_sg":84,"translative_sg":113},"nominal","Kymenä","Kymestä","Kymettä","Kymeltä","Kymellä","Kymelle","Kymen","Kymeen","Kymessä","Kymeä","Kymeksi",[115,117],{"kotusClass":8,"forms":116},{"type":102,"essive_sg":103,"elative_sg":104,"abessive_sg":105,"ablative_sg":106,"adessive_sg":107,"allative_sg":108,"genitive_sg":109,"illative_sg":110,"inessive_sg":111,"partitive_sg":112,"accusative_sg":109,"nominative_sg":84,"translative_sg":113},{"kotusClass":118,"forms":119},5,{"type":102,"essive_pl":120,"essive_sg":121,"elative_pl":122,"elative_sg":123,"abessive_pl":124,"abessive_sg":125,"ablative_pl":126,"ablative_sg":127,"adessive_pl":128,"adessive_sg":129,"allative_pl":130,"allative_sg":131,"genitive_pl":132,"genitive_sg":133,"illative_pl":134,"illative_sg":135,"inessive_pl":136,"inessive_sg":137,"partitive_pl":138,"partitive_sg":139,"accusative_pl":140,"accusative_sg":133,"comitative_pl":141,"nominative_pl":140,"nominative_sg":6,"instructive_pl":142,"translative_pl":143,"translative_sg":144},"kymeinä","kyminä","kymeistä","kymistä","kymeittä","kymittä","kymeiltä","kymiltä","kymeillä","kymillä","kymeille","kymille","kymien","kymin","kymeihin","kymiin","kymeissä","kymissä","kymejä","kymiä","kymit","kymineen","kymein","kymeiksi","kymiksi","-ymi",[147,148],"fymi","tymi"]