Reconstruction:Proto-Germanic/Dōnawjaz
Proto-Germanic edit
Etymology edit
Borrowed from Proto-Celtic *Dānowyos, an extended form of the river-name *Dānu, from Proto-Indo-European *déh₂nu (“river goddess”), akin to *dʰenh₂- (“to set in motion; to flow”). The Celtic name is also the source of Latin Dānuvius, Dānubius and Ancient Greek Δανούιος (Danoúios) and Δανούβιος (Danoúbios). *Dōnawjaz was reinterpreted as a feminine jō-stem in West Germanic (Schumacher 2007: 181).
Pronunciation edit
Proper noun edit
*Dōnawjaz m
- the river Danube
Inflection edit
masculine ja-stemDeclension of *Dōnawjaz (masculine ja-stem) | ||
---|---|---|
singular | ||
nominative | *Dōnawjaz | |
vocative | *Dōnawi | |
accusative | *Dōnawją | |
genitive | *Dōnawjas, *Dōnawis | |
dative | *Dōnawjai | |
instrumental | *Dōnawjō |
Descendants edit
- Proto-West Germanic:
- Old English: Dōnua (hapax att. c. 890, possibly actually from Old Cornish or Old Saxon)
- → Old Norse: Dónua (?)
- Old High German: Tuonouwa, Duonowa, Tuonouwe
- Old Saxon:
- Old Dutch:
- Middle Dutch: Denouwe
- Old English: Dōnua (hapax att. c. 890, possibly actually from Old Cornish or Old Saxon)
- Gothic: *𐌳𐍉𐌽𐌰𐍅𐌹 (*dōnawi)
References edit
- Stefan Schumacher (2007), ‘Die Deutschen und die Nachbarstämme: Lexikalische und strukturelle Sprachkontaktphänomene entlang der keltisch-germanischen Übergangszone’ ([1]), Keltische Forschungen 2, pp. 181-182, Praesens Verlag, Vienna.
- David Stifter (2009), ‘The Proto-Germanic shift *ā>*ō and early Germanic linguistic contacts’ (pdf), Historische Sprachforschung / Historical Linguistics, Bd. 122, p. 277.
- Koch, John (2004), “*Dānu, *Dānowyos”, in English–Proto-Celtic Word-list with attested comparanda, University of Wales Centre for Advanced Welsh & Celtic Studies, page 283