ππΊπ°πΏπ³π°ππ°πΉππ
Gothic
Etymology
The second element is *ππ°πΉππ (*raips), from Proto-Germanic *raipaz. The first is unclear; perhaps from Proto-Germanic *skaudΕ (βsheath, huskβ), which is probably related to *hΕ«dijanΔ (βto concealβ).[1] Compare Old Norse skauΓ° (βsheathβ), German Schote (βpod, husk, sheathβ).
Noun
ππΊπ°πΏπ³π°ππ°πΉππ β’ (skaudaraips) m
Declension
May be a neuter a-stem instead: the attested forms (all accusative singular) are ambiguous. On etymological grounds, a masculine form is assumed here.
| singular | plural | |
|---|---|---|
| nominative | ππΊπ°πΏπ³π°ππ°πΉππ skaudaraips |
ππΊπ°πΏπ³π°ππ°πΉπππ skaudaraipΕs |
| vocative | ππΊπ°πΏπ³π°ππ°πΉπ skaudaraip |
ππΊπ°πΏπ³π°ππ°πΉπππ skaudaraipΕs |
| accusative | ππΊπ°πΏπ³π°ππ°πΉπ skaudaraip |
ππΊπ°πΏπ³π°ππ°πΉππ°π½π skaudaraipans |
| genitive | ππΊπ°πΏπ³π°ππ°πΉππΉπ skaudaraipis |
ππΊπ°πΏπ³π°ππ°πΉππ΄ skaudaraipΔ |
| dative | ππΊπ°πΏπ³π°ππ°πΉππ° skaudaraipa |
ππΊπ°πΏπ³π°ππ°πΉππ°πΌ skaudaraipam |
References
- ^ Pokorny, Julius (1959) β951-53β, in Indogermanisches etymologisches WΓΆrterbuch [Indo-European Etymological Dictionary] (in German), volume 3, Bern, MΓΌnchen: Francke Verlag, pages 951-53