< Reconstruction:Proto-West Germanic
Reconstruction:Proto-West Germanic/Rūmu
Proto-West Germanic
Etymology
From Proto-Germanic *Rūmō, itself from Latin Rōma (possibly through Proto-Celtic *Rūmā).[1]
Inflection
| ō-stem | ||
|---|---|---|
| Singular | ||
| Nominative | *Rūmu | |
| Genitive | *Rūmā | |
| Singular | Plural | |
| Nominative | *Rūmu | — |
| Accusative | *Rūmā | — |
| Genitive | *Rūmā | — |
| Dative | *Rūmē | — |
| Instrumental | *Rūmu | — |
Derived terms
Descendants
In many of these descendants, the original form was later influenced by the Latin form (and sometimes Romance languages like French), thereby the earlier ū was replaced with ō.
References
- David Stifter (2009), ‘The Proto-Germanic shift *ā>*ō and early Germanic linguistic contacts’ (pdf), Historische Sprachforschung / Historical Linguistics, Bd. 122
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