< Reconstruction:Proto-Finnic

Reconstruction:Proto-Finnic/meccä

This Proto-Finnic entry contains reconstructed terms and roots. As such, the term(s) in this entry are not directly attested, but are hypothesized to have existed based on comparative evidence.

Proto-Finnic

Alternative forms

Etymology

Probably from a Baltic language. The term was apparently borrowed during the time of the split of South Estonian and Livonian from the rest of Finnic, as the former group borrowed it with back vowel harmony, whereas the latter group has front vowel harmony. Compare with Lithuanian mẽdžias (forest), Latvian mežs (forest) and Latgalian mežs (forest).[1][2]

Alternatively from Proto-Finno-Ugric *mećä, *meććä (edge, periphery), compare Hungarian messze (far).

Noun

*meccä

  1. forest

Inflection

Descendants

  • Estonian: mets
  • Finnish: metsä
  • Ingrian: metsä
  • Karelian:
  • Livvi: meččy
  • Ludian: mečč
  • Veps: mec
  • Votic: mettse
  • Proto-Samic: *meaccē

References

  1. Illich-Svitych, Vladislav M. (1963) Именная акцентуация в балтийском и славянском: Судьба акцентуационных парадигм [Nominal Accentuation in Baltic and Slavic: The Fate of Accentuation Paradigms] (in Russian), Soviet Union; Moscow: Publishing house of the USSR Academy of Sciences, page 46: “[footnote] 37”
  2. Illich-Svitych, Vladislav M. (1979) Nominal Accentuation in Baltic and Slavic: The Fate of Accentuation Paradigms (in English), United States of America: The MIT Press Cambridge, Massachusetts, and London, England, page 157: “37.”
  • mets in Metsmägi, Iris; Sedrik, Meeli; Soosaar, Sven-Erik (2012), Eesti etümoloogiasõnaraamat, Tallinn: Eesti Keele Instituut, →ISBN
  • Itkonen, Erkki; Kulonen, Ulla-Maija, editors (1992–2000) Suomen sanojen alkuperä [The origin of Finnish words] (in Finnish), [note: linked online version also includes some other etymological sources], Helsinki: Institute for the Languages of Finland/Finnish Literature Society, →ISBN
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