πΌπΉπ³πΎπΉπ
Gothic
Etymology
From Proto-Germanic *midjaz, from Proto-Indo-European *mΓ©dΚ°yos. 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 π·π°ππΎπΉπ (harjis), π½πΉπΏπΎπΉπ (niujis), π½πΉπΈπΎπΉπ (niΓΎjis) and π°π»πΎπΉπ (aljis).[1]
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /ΛmiΓ°.jis/
Adjective
πΌπΉπ³πΎπΉπ β’ (midjis)
Declension
singular | masculine | feminine | neuter |
---|---|---|---|
nominative | πΌπΉπ³πΎπΉπ midjis |
πΌπΉπ³πΎπ° midja |
πΌπΉπ³πΉ, πΌπΉπ³πΎπ°ππ° midi, midjata |
accusative | πΌπΉπ³πΎπ°π½π° midjana |
πΌπΉπ³πΎπ° midja |
πΌπΉπ³πΉ, πΌπΉπ³πΎπ°ππ° midi, midjata |
genitive | πΌπΉπ³πΎπΉπ midjis |
πΌπΉπ³πΎπ°πΉπΆππ midjaizΕs |
πΌπΉπ³πΎπΉπ midjis |
dative | πΌπΉπ³πΎπ°πΌπΌπ° midjamma |
πΌπΉπ³πΎπ°πΉ midjai |
πΌπΉπ³πΎπ°πΌπΌπ° midjamma |
plural | masculine | feminine | neuter |
nominative | πΌπΉπ³πΎπ°πΉ midjai |
πΌπΉπ³πΎππ midjΕs |
πΌπΉπ³πΎπ° midja |
accusative | πΌπΉπ³πΎπ°π½π midjans |
πΌπΉπ³πΎππ midjΕs |
πΌπΉπ³πΎπ° midja |
genitive | πΌπΉπ³πΎπ°πΉπΆπ΄ midjaizΔ |
πΌπΉπ³πΎπ°πΉπΆπ midjaizΕ |
πΌπΉπ³πΎπ°πΉπΆπ΄ midjaizΔ |
dative | πΌπΉπ³πΎπ°πΉπΌ midjaim |
πΌπΉπ³πΎπ°πΉπΌ midjaim |
πΌπΉπ³πΎπ°πΉπΌ midjaim |
Derived terms
- πΌπΉπ³πΎπ°ππ π΄πΉππ°πΉπ½π (midjasweipains, βdeluge, cataclysmβ)
- πΌπΉπ³πΎπΏπ½π²π°ππ³π (midjungards, βthe worldβ)
Related terms
- πΌπΉπ³πΏπΌπ° (miduma, βmidst, middleβ)
- πΌπΉπ³πΏπΌππ½ (midumΕn, βto mediateβ)
Descendants
- β? Albanian: midis
References
- ^ Ringe, Donald (2006) From Proto-Indo-European to Proto-Germanic (A Linguistic History of English; 1)β[1], Oxford: Oxford University Press, βISBN, page 130