πŒ·π‰πŒ·πŒ°

Gothic edit

Etymology edit

From Proto-Germanic *hōhô.

Noun edit

πŒ·π‰πŒ·πŒ° β€’ (hōha)Β m[1]

  1. plough

Declension edit

Masculine an-stem
Singular Plural
Nominative πŒ·π‰πŒ·πŒ°
hōha
πŒ·π‰πŒ·πŒ°πŒ½πƒ
hōhans
Vocative πŒ·π‰πŒ·πŒ°
hōha
πŒ·π‰πŒ·πŒ°πŒ½πƒ
hōhans
Accusative πŒ·π‰πŒ·πŒ°πŒ½
hōhan
πŒ·π‰πŒ·πŒ°πŒ½πƒ
hōhans
Genitive πŒ·π‰πŒ·πŒΉπŒ½πƒ
hōhins
πŒ·π‰πŒ·πŒ°πŒ½πŒ΄
hōhanΔ“
Dative πŒ·π‰πŒ·πŒΉπŒ½
hōhin
πŒ·π‰πŒ·πŒ°πŒΌ
hōham

References edit

  1. ^ Kroonen, Guus (2013) β€œ*hohan-”, in Etymological Dictionary of Proto-Germanic (Leiden Indo-European Etymological Dictionary Series; 11), Leiden, Boston: Brill, β†’ISBN, page 239: β€œhoha”