< Reconstruction:Proto-Germanic
Reconstruction:Proto-Germanic/lingwą
Proto-Germanic
Etymology
Perhaps from Pre-Proto-Germanic *lengʷʰom, from Proto-Indo-European *lengʷʰ-. Compare Proto-Slavic *lǫgъ (“meadow”) from Proto-Balto-Slavic *lanˀgas. The original meaning may have been *“unused land”; Kroonen compares the semantic development of *haiþī (“heath”).[1] The same semantic pairing exists in modern Irish fraoch.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /ˈliŋʷ.ɡʷɑ̃/
Inflection
| neuter a-stemDeclension of *lingwą (neuter a-stem) | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| singular | plural | ||
| nominative | *lingwą | *lingwō | |
| vocative | *lingwą | *lingwō | |
| accusative | *lingwą | *lingwō | |
| genitive | *lingwas, *lingwis | *lingwǫ̂ | |
| dative | *lingwai | *lingwamaz | |
| instrumental | *lingwō | *lingwamiz | |
Derived terms
- *lungwa-blautaz[1]
- Proto-Norse:
- Swedish: lung-blōt (“soaked”) (dialectal)
- Norwegian: lunge-blaut (“soaked”) (dialectal)
- Proto-Norse:
Descendants
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