Rüen
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Low German
[edit]Alternative forms
[edit]- Rühe (Paderbornisch)
- Rüë (Lippisch)
- Rüe (Lippisch, Münsterländisch, Sauerländisch)
- rüe (Sauerländisch; scientific spelling)
Etymology
[edit]From the oblique form of Rüe (still retained in some dialects), itself with d-loss from older Rüede, from Middle Low German rȫde, from Old Saxon *(h)ruthio, from Proto-Germanic *hruþjô (“male dog”), possibly from *hruttōn- (“to roar”), from a Proto-Indo-European root shared by Ancient Greek κόρυζα (kóruza), Old English hrot. Or, from Proto-Germanic *hreutan-, *hrūtan-, *hruttōną (“to snore”), which would be related to Old Norse hrjóta.
Cognate with Dutch reu, German Rüde. Both of these now mean “male dog”, but the original meaning was “large dog, hound”.
Pronunciation
[edit]Noun
[edit]Rüen m (plural Rüens)
Noun
[edit]Rüen
- inflection of Rüe:
Alternative forms
[edit]- Rüens (pl.)
References
[edit]- Guus Kroonen (2013) “hruþjan”, in Alexander Lubotsky, editor, Etymological Dictionary of Proto-Germanic (Leiden Indo-European Etymological Dictionary Series; 11)[1], Leiden, Boston: Brill, →ISBN
Categories:
- Low German terms inherited from Middle Low German
- Low German terms derived from Middle Low German
- Low German terms inherited from Old Saxon
- Low German terms derived from Old Saxon
- Low German terms inherited from Proto-Germanic
- Low German terms derived from Proto-Germanic
- Low German terms derived from Proto-Indo-European
- Low German terms with IPA pronunciation
- Low German lemmas
- Low German nouns
- Low German masculine nouns
- Regional Low German
- Low German non-lemma forms
- Low German noun forms