Reconstruction:Proto-West Germanic/arut
Appearance
Proto-West Germanic
[edit]Etymology
[edit]Unknown; possibly a substrate borrowing, compare Latin raudus (“lump (of ore, metal); bronze, brass”), and further Sumerian 𒍏 (urud, “copper”).[1][2]
Noun
[edit]*arut m
Inflection
[edit]| Consonant stem | ||
|---|---|---|
| Singular | ||
| Nominative | *arut | |
| Genitive | *aruti | |
| Singular | Plural | |
| Nominative | *arut | *aruti |
| Accusative | *arutu | *aruti |
| Genitive | *aruti | *arutō |
| Dative | *aruti | *arutum |
| Instrumental | *aruti | *arutum |
Alternative reconstructions
[edit]- *arit
Descendants
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ Kroonen, Guus (2013), “*arut-”, in Etymological Dictionary of Proto-Germanic (Leiden Indo-European Etymological Dictionary Series; 11)[1], Leiden, Boston: Brill, →ISBN, page 37
- ^ Schrijver, Peter (1997), “Animal, vegetable and mineral: some Western European substratum words”, in Lubotsky, A., editor, Sound Law and Analogy[2], Amsterdam/Atlanta, page 308
Categories:
- Proto-West Germanic terms with unknown etymologies
- Proto-West Germanic terms borrowed from substrate languages
- Proto-West Germanic terms derived from substrate languages
- Proto-West Germanic lemmas
- Proto-West Germanic nouns
- Proto-West Germanic masculine nouns
- gmw-pro:Metallurgy
- Proto-West Germanic consonant stem nouns
