Reconstruction:Thracian/kersas
Thracian edit
Etymology edit
(This etymology is missing or incomplete. Please add to it, or discuss it at the Etymology scriptorium.)
Related to Lithuanian kėršis, kėršas, Old Prussian kerse, kerso and Proto-Indo-European *kr̥snós: Old Church Slavonic чрьнъ (črĭnŭ), Bulgarian черен (čeren), Proto-Slavic *čьrnъ, and Sanskrit कृष्ण (kṛṣṇa).[1][2]
Noun edit
*kersas
Adjective edit
*kersas
Usage notes edit
- Only attested in anthroponyms: Κέρσος m (Kérsos) (Abydos, Ptolemaic ?168±138 BC)[3],[4] Κερσης m (Kersēs) (Samos), Κερζα f (Kerza) (Novo Selo, Plovdiv Province)[5] and Κερσοβλέπτης (Kersobléptēs), Κερσιβαυλος (Kersibaulos) (wiki).[1]
Derived terms edit
References edit
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 Duridanov, Ivan Vasiliev (1985) Die Sprache der Thraker [The Language of the Thracians][1] (in German), Hieronymus Verlag, →ISBN, pages 60, 78
- ^ Vladimir I. Georgiev (1977) Траките И Техният Език [The Thracians and their Language][2] (in Bulgarian), Изд-во на Българската академия на науките, page 84
- ^ Paul Perdrizet, Gustave Lefebvre (1919) Les graffites grecs du Memnonion d'Abydos, Nancy-Paris-Strasbourg: Chez Berger-Levrault, page 77, ?54
- ^ “Graffites d'Abydos 421”, in Searchable Greek Inscriptions (in Ancient Greek), https://epigraphy.packhum.org, 2007—2020
- ^ “IGGulg III, 1 1408”, in Searchable Greek Inscriptions (in Ancient Greek), https://epigraphy.packhum.org, 2007—2020