πŒšπŒ€πŒ“πŒ€πŒ“πŒ‰πŒ–πŒ“

Umbrian

Etymology

From Proto-Italic *farsāsios, from Proto-Indo-European *bʰers-.

Adjective

πŒšπŒ€πŒ“πŒ€πŒ“πŒ‰πŒ–πŒ“ β€’ (farariurm (nominative plural)

  1. of or pertaining to grain
    • Menavia 2:
      πŒ‚πŒ–πŒ„πŒ”πŒ•πŒ–πŒ“ πŒ…πŒ€πŒ“πŒ€πŒ“πŒ‰πŒ–πŒ“
      cuestur varariur
      • Translation by Teigo Onishi
        quaestors of the spelt

References

  • De Vaan, Michiel (2008) Etymological Dictionary of Latin and the other Italic Languages (Leiden Indo-European Etymological Dictionary Series; 7), Leiden, Boston: Brill, β†’ISBN, page 201
  • β€œUmbrian ⟨rs⟩ and ⟨rfβŸ©β€, in Indo-European Linguisticsβ€Ž[1] (in American English), volume 9, number 1, 7 December 2021, β†’DOI, β†’ISSN, pages 203–233
  • Daniele F. Maras (20 November 2017) Epigraphy and Nomenclatureβ€Ž[2], De Gruyter, β†’DOI, β†’ISBN, pages 63–88