бьрковьске

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Old Novgorodian

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Alternative forms

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Etymology

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First attested in c. 1140‒1160. Shortened from *бьрковьске пѫде (*bĭrkovĭske pǫde, pood from the city of Birka). By surface analysis, *Бьркꙑ (*Bĭrky) +‎ -ове (-ove) +‎ -ьске (-ĭske) or +‎ -овьске (-ovĭske), borrowed from Old Norse Birka (a port city in medieval Sweden), ultimately from birki- (birchen), bjǫrk (birch). Compare Estonian perkapund, dialectal põrgepund (ship-pound) < Old Swedish *biærköa pund, while Old Norse *birkiskr pund could serve as a model for Old Novgorodian *бьрковьске пѫде (*bĭrkovĭske pǫde) and Old East Slavic *бьрковьскъ пѫдъ (*bĭrkovĭskŭ pǫdŭ).[1] Cognate with Old East Slavic бьрковьскъ (bĭrkovĭskŭ), Old Ruthenian берковескъ (berkovesk).

Noun

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бьрковьске (bĭrkovĭskem

  1. berkovets (an old unit of weight, approximately 164 kilograms or 10 poods)
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References

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  1. ^ Anikin, A. E. (2009) “бéрковец”, in Русский этимологический словарь [Russian Etymological Dictionary] (in Russian), numbers 3 (бе – болдыхать), Moscow: Manuscript Monuments Ancient Rus, →ISBN, page 132

Further reading

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