πŒ…πŒ„πŒπŒ„πŒ•πŒ‘

South Picene

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Alternative forms

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Etymology

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From Proto-Italic *lapets.

Noun

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πŒ…πŒ„πŒπŒ„πŒ•πŒ‘ β€’ (vepetΓ­) (locative singular)

  1. The meaning of this term is uncertain. Possibilities include: monument, tomb
    • Discovered in 1943, Loro Piceno stele[1]:
      πŒ€πŒπŒ€πŒ„πŒ”βπŒ’πŒ–πŒπŒ€πŒ•[?βπŒ„?]πŒ”πŒŒπŒ‘πŒβπŒπŒžπŒπŒžπŒπŒ‰πŒ”βπŒπŒ‘πŒ“βπŒŒπŒ„πŒšπŒ‰πŒ‘πŒβπŒ…πŒ„πŒ‰πŒ€πŒ•βπŒ…πŒ„πŒπŒ„πŒ•πŒ‘
      apaes qupat[? e?]smΓ­n pΓΊpΓΊnis nΓ­r mefiΓ­n veiat vepetΓ­
      The nobleman lies, the chief of the Picenes (?) is (?), in the middle of this tomb.

References

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  1. ^ Emmanuel Dupraz (2012) Sabellian Demonstratives: Forms and Functions (in South Picene), Brill, page 52[1]
  • De Vaan, Michiel (2008) Etymological Dictionary of Latin and the other Italic Languages (Leiden Indo-European Etymological Dictionary Series; 7), Leiden, Boston: Brill, β†’ISBN
  • Raoul Zamponi (2021) South Piceneβ€Ž[2] (quotation in South Picene; overall work in English), Routledge
  • James Clackson (2015) β€œSubgrouping in the Sabellian branch of Indo-European”, in Transactions of the Philological Societyβ€Ž[3], volume 113, number 1, β†’DOI, β†’ISSN, pages 4–37