Reconstruction:Proto-West Germanic/gān
Appearance
Proto-West Germanic
[edit]Etymology
[edit]From Proto-Germanic *gāną.
Verb
[edit]*gān[1]
- to go
Inflection
[edit]*gaiþi, ?, ?
This verb needs an inflection-table template.
Related terms
[edit]Descendants
[edit]- Old English: gān
- Old Frisian: gān
- Old Saxon: gān
- Old Dutch: gān
- Old High German: gān, gēn, kēn
- Middle High German: gān, gēn, kēn
- Alemannic German: gaa, gan, ge, gi, goo, gu
- Bavarian: geh, gea, gean, gian
- Cimbrian: gian, ghéenan (Sette Comuni)
- Northern Bavarian: [ɡ̊ɛi]
- Central Franconian: giehn, gohn (northeastern Moselle Franconian), john, jonn (Ripuarian)
- East Central German: gii, giin (Erzgebirgisch)
- East Franconian:
- German: gehen
- Rhine Franconian: geh, gehe, gäh, gähe, gäj, gäje, gih, gihe, gej, geje
- Frankfurterisch: [g̥ε̃ː]
- Pennsylvania German: geh
- Yiddish: גיין (geyn)
- Middle High German: gān, gēn, kēn
References
[edit]- ^ Ringe, Donald; Taylor, Ann (2014), The Development of Old English (A Linguistic History of English; 2), Oxford: Oxford University Press, →ISBN, page 109: “*gān”
Categories:
- Proto-West Germanic terms inherited from Proto-Germanic
- Proto-West Germanic terms derived from Proto-Indo-European
- Proto-West Germanic terms derived from the Proto-Indo-European root *ǵʰeh₁-
- Proto-West Germanic terms derived from Proto-Germanic
- Proto-West Germanic lemmas
- Proto-West Germanic verbs
- gmw-pro:Gaits
- Proto-West Germanic irregular verbs
