סאַזשע
‘soot’
סאַזשע
סאַדזשע, סאַדזע
די
'soot'
ETYMOLOGY
Ukrainian са́жа; Belarusian са́жа; Polish sadza; Russian са́жа; from Proto-Slavic ✱sàďa; from Proto-Balto-Slavic ✱soʔd-i-; cf. Lithuanian súodžiai 'soot', (dialectal) suodis; from PIE ✱sõd-i- ? cf. English soot; Old Norse sót.
South Slavic:
Old Church Slavonic: сажда (sažda)

CENTRAL
Unterland (East Transcarpathian)
šažə {ETCP, Nyzhnya Apsha, 48233}
sašʲ {POLAND, Wolbrom, 50196}
cazəs / sazəs צאַזעס / סאַזעס{POLAND, Warsaw, 52211}
NORTHEASTERN
Lithuania
s̀az̀e {LITHUANIA, Vilnius, 54257}
SOUTHEASTERN
sážʲə {ROMANIA, Brăila, 45273}