пльсковитине

Old Novgorodian

edit

Etymology

edit

By surface analysis, Пльскове (Plĭskove, Pskov) +‎ -итине (-itine). First attested in c. 1100‒1120.

Pronunciation

edit
  • Hyphenation: пль‧ско‧ви‧ти‧не

Noun

edit

пльсковитине (plĭskovitinem[1]

  1. Pskovian (resident of Pskov)
    Synonym: пльсковиць (plĭskovićĭ)
    • c. 1180‒1200, Schaeken, Jos (2019) Voices on Birchbark (SSGL; 43)‎[2], Leiden, Boston: Brill, transl., Берестяная грамота № 926 [Birchbark letter no. 926]‎[3], Novgorod:
      … микиѳороу полъ ·ꙅ· кнѣ и грвна · гюлопиницю ·ꙁ· кнъ · пльсковитиноу полъ ·ѳ· кнѣ домашкоу · полъ ·ѳ· рѣꙁанѣ …
      … mikiθoru polŭ ·dz· kně i grvna · gjulopinićju ·z· knŭ · plĭskovitinu polŭ ·θ· kně domašku · polŭ ·θ· rězaně …
      To Mikifor, 5 and a half kunas and a grivna. To Gjulopinič (Gjulopa's son), 7 kunas. To the Pskovian, 8 and a half kunas. To Domaško, 8 and a half rezanas.
edit
adjectives
nouns
proper nouns

References

edit
  1. ^ Zaliznyak, Andrey (2004) Древненовгородский диалект [Old Novgorod dialect]‎[1] (in Russian), 2nd edition, Moscow: Languages of Slavic Cultures, →ISBN, page 789

Further reading

edit