๐Œฝ๐Œน๐Œธ๐Œพ๐Œน๐ƒ

Gothic edit

Etymology edit

From Proto-Germanic *niรพjaz, from Proto-Indo-European *nรญtyos; compare Sanskrit เคจเคฟเคคเฅเคฏ (nitya, โ€œown, innate, nativeโ€). The -jis in the nominative singular results from morphological levelling with the oblique forms, as the expected outcome of *-jaz in Gothic following a consonant would otherwise have been *-is. Other examples of this development include ๐Œท๐Œฐ๐‚๐Œพ๐Œน๐ƒ (harjis), ๐Œฝ๐Œน๐Œฟ๐Œพ๐Œน๐ƒ (niujis), ๐Œฐ๐Œป๐Œพ๐Œน๐ƒ (aljis) and ๐Œผ๐Œน๐Œณ๐Œพ๐Œน๐ƒ (midjis).[1]

Noun edit

๐Œฝ๐Œน๐Œธ๐Œพ๐Œน๐ƒ โ€ข (niรพjis)ย m

  1. kinsman, a male relative

Declension edit

Masculine ja-stem
Singular Plural
Nominative ๐Œฝ๐Œน๐Œธ๐Œพ๐Œน๐ƒ
niรพjis
๐Œฝ๐Œน๐Œธ๐Œพ๐‰๐ƒ
niรพjลs
Vocative ๐Œฝ๐Œน๐Œธ๐Œน
niรพi
๐Œฝ๐Œน๐Œธ๐Œพ๐‰๐ƒ
niรพjลs
Accusative ๐Œฝ๐Œน๐Œธ๐Œน
niรพi
๐Œฝ๐Œน๐Œธ๐Œพ๐Œฐ๐Œฝ๐ƒ
niรพjans
Genitive ๐Œฝ๐Œน๐Œธ๐Œพ๐Œน๐ƒ
niรพjis
๐Œฝ๐Œน๐Œธ๐Œพ๐Œด
niรพjฤ“
Dative ๐Œฝ๐Œน๐Œธ๐Œพ๐Œฐ
niรพja
๐Œฝ๐Œน๐Œธ๐Œพ๐Œฐ๐Œผ
niรพjam

Derived terms edit

Related terms edit

References edit

  1. ^ Ringe, Donald (2006) From Proto-Indo-European to Proto-Germanic (A Linguistic History of English; 1)โ€Ž[1], Oxford: Oxford University Press, โ†’ISBN, page 130