๐Œฐ๐‚๐Œพ๐Œฐ๐Œฝ

Gothic edit

Etymology edit

From Proto-Germanic *arjanฤ…, from Proto-Indo-European *hโ‚‚รฉryeti. Cognate to Old English erian, Old Norse erja, and to the first element of Koine Greek แผ€ฯฮฟฯ„ฯฮนฮฌฯ‰ (arotriรกล), which it translates.

Pronunciation edit

Verb edit

๐Œฐ๐‚๐Œพ๐Œฐ๐Œฝ โ€ข (arjan)

  1. (hapax) to plough (to use a plough)
    • 4th century C.E., Wulfila (attributed), Gothic Bible, Luke 17:7:
      ๐ˆ๐Œฐ๐ƒ ๐Œธ๐Œฐ๐Œฝ ๐Œน๐Œถ๐…๐Œฐ๐‚๐Œฐ ๐ƒ๐Œบ๐Œฐ๐Œป๐Œบ ๐Œฐ๐Œน๐Œฒ๐Œฐ๐Œฝ๐Œณ๐ƒ ๐Œฐ๐‚๐Œพ๐Œฐ๐Œฝ๐Œณ๐Œฐ๐Œฝ ๐Œฐ๐Œน๐Œธ๐Œธ๐Œฐ๐Œฟ ๐Œท๐Œฐ๐Œป๐Œณ๐Œฐ๐Œฝ๐Œณ๐Œฐ๐Œฝ, ๐ƒ๐Œฐ๐Œด๐Œน ๐Œฐ๐„๐Œฒ๐Œฐ๐Œฒ๐Œฒ๐Œฐ๐Œฝ๐Œณ๐Œน๐Œฝ ๐Œฐ๐† ๐Œท๐Œฐ๐Œน๐Œธ๐Œพ๐Œฐ๐Œน ๐Œต๐Œน๐Œธ๐Œฐ๐Œน: ๐ƒ๐Œฟ๐Œฝ๐ƒ ๐Œท๐Œน๐Œฝ๐Œณ๐Œฐ๐‚๐Œป๐Œด๐Œน๐Œธ ๐Œฐ๐Œฝ๐Œฟ๐Œท๐Œบ๐Œฟ๐Œผ๐Œฑ๐Œด๐Œน?
      ฦ•as รพan izwara skalk aigands arjandan aiรพรพau haldandan, saei atgaggandin af haiรพjai qiรพai: suns hindarleiรพ anuhkumbei?
      But which of you, having a servant plowing or feeding cattle, will say unto him by and by, when he is come from the field, Go and sit down to meat? (KJV)

Conjugation edit

Only attested in the accusative singular of the present participle: ๐Œฐ๐‚๐Œพ๐Œฐ๐Œฝ๐Œณ๐Œฐ๐Œฝ (arjandan), which is not enough to determine the conjugation. In Old High German, it is a class 7 strong verb, but in all other Germanic languages, it is class 1 weak, while the root's phonological shape could also suggest class 6 strong.

See also edit

Further reading edit