Reconstruction:Proto-West Germanic/gadm
Proto-West Germanic
editEtymology
editUnknown, conceivably from the stem of *gadur (“together”),[1] with the rare suffix as in *bōsm, *butm, *āþm.
The semantic and formal match of African Arabic قَيْطُون (qayṭūn) must be a coincidence.[2]
Noun
edit*gadm n or m[3]
Inflection
editNeuter a-stem | ||
---|---|---|
Singular | ||
Nominative | *gadm | |
Genitive | *gadmas | |
Singular | Plural | |
Nominative | *gadm | *gadmu |
Accusative | *gadm | *gadmu |
Genitive | *gadmas | *gadmō |
Dative | *gadmē | *gadmum |
Instrumental | *gadmu | *gadmum |
Masculine a-stem | ||
---|---|---|
Singular | ||
Nominative | *gadm | |
Genitive | *gadmas | |
Singular | Plural | |
Nominative | *gadm | *gadmō, *gadmōs |
Accusative | *gadm | *gadmā |
Genitive | *gadmas | *gadmō |
Dative | *gadmē | *gadmum |
Instrumental | *gadmu | *gadmum |
Descendants
edit- Old Frisian: gaten, gathen
- Old Dutch: *gadem
- Old Saxon: *gadem
- Old High German: cadum, gadum, gadem, gadam
References
edit- ^ So grouped in Fick, August (1909) Vergleichendes Wörterbuch der indogermanischen Sprachen (in German), 4th edition, volume III, bearbeitet von Adalbert Bezzenberger, Hjalmar Falk, August Fick, Whitley Stokes, Alf Torp, Göttingen: Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht, page 123
- ^ As that can’t be acquired in the fashion of a traded item like هَيْدُورة (haydūra) or كَرْزِيَّة (karziyya) via Andalusian Arabic (where the pattern KāLūm was replaced with KayLūM, thus having this outcome) in view of its Aramaic attestations and as one disavows Semitic substratum of Germanic possibly preserving a Punic cognate.
- ^
- Neuter in earlier German, so reconstructed in Fick, August (1909) Vergleichendes Wörterbuch der indogermanischen Sprachen (in German), 4th edition, volume III, bearbeitet von Adalbert Bezzenberger, Hjalmar Falk, August Fick, Whitley Stokes, Alf Torp, Göttingen: Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht, page 123
- masculine in Middle Dutch and Old Frisian, so in Köbler, Gerhard (2014) “*gadma, *gadmaz”, in Germanisches Wörterbuch, 5th edition
Categories:
- Proto-West Germanic terms with unknown etymologies
- Proto-West Germanic lemmas
- Proto-West Germanic nouns
- Proto-West Germanic neuter nouns
- Proto-West Germanic masculine nouns
- Proto-West Germanic nouns with multiple genders
- gmw-pro:Rooms
- Proto-West Germanic neuter a-stem nouns
- Proto-West Germanic masculine a-stem nouns