Reconstruction:Proto-West Germanic/mangārī
Proto-West Germanic edit
Etymology edit
From Latin mangō (“dealer, monger”) + *-ārī.
Noun edit
*mangārī m
Inflection edit
Masculine ja-stem | ||
---|---|---|
Singular | ||
Nominative | *mangārī | |
Genitive | *mangārijas | |
Singular | Plural | |
Nominative | *mangārī | *mangārijō, *mangārijōs |
Accusative | *mangārī | *mangārijā |
Genitive | *mangārijas | *mangārijō |
Dative | *mangārijē | *mangārijum |
Instrumental | *mangāriju | *mangārijum |
Derived terms edit
Descendants edit
- Old English: mangere
- Old Saxon: *mangāri
- Old Dutch: *mangāri
- Old High German: mangāri, mengāri, mangari
References edit
- ^ Miller, D. Gary (2012 June 13) “Early loanwords from Latin and Greek”, in External Influences on English: From its Beginnings to the Renaissance, Oxford University Press, , →ISBN, § 4.5, page 64: “OHG mangâri ‘merchant; dealer’, OE mangere ‘trader; merchant; monger'”.