Reconstruction:Proto-Germanic/murnaną

This Proto-Germanic entry contains reconstructed terms and roots. As such, the term(s) in this entry are not directly attested, but are hypothesized to have existed based on comparative evidence.

Proto-Germanic

Etymology

From Proto-Indo-European *(s)mer- (to think; remember).

For the meaning development compare commemorate, Russian помина́ть (pominátʹ), поми́нки (pomínki), помина́льный (pominálʹnyj).

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /ˈmur.nɑ.nɑ̃/

Verb

*murnaną

  1. to feel sorrow or grief; to mourn

Inflection

Conjugation of (weak class 4)
active voice passive voice
present tense indicative subjunctive imperative indicative subjunctive
1st singular *murnō *murnaų
2nd singular *murnōsi *murnais *murnō
3rd singular *murnōþi *murnai *murnōþau
1st dual *murnōs *murnaiw
2nd dual *murnaþiz *murnaiþiz *murnaþiz
1st plural *murnamaz *murnaim
2nd plural *murnaþ *murnaiþ *murnaþ
3rd plural *murnanþi *murnain *murnanþau
past tense indicative subjunctive
1st singular *murnōdǭ *murnōdēdį̄
2nd singular *murnōdēz *murnōdēdīz
3rd singular *murnōdē *murnōdēdī
1st dual *murnōdēdū *murnōdēdīw
2nd dual *murnōdēdudiz *murnōdēdīdiz
1st plural *murnōdēdum *murnōdēdīm
2nd plural *murnōdēdud *murnōdēdīd
3rd plural *murnōdēdun *murnōdēdīn
present past
participles *murnandz

Descendants

  • Proto-West Germanic: *murnan
    • Old English: murnan
      • Middle English: mournen, mornen, murnen
    • Old Saxon: mornan; (murnian, mornian); (mornōn)
      • Middle Low German: vormornen
    • Old French: morner
      • Middle French: *morner; amorner, amornir
    • (Old High German: mornēn < Proto-Germanic *murnāną)
  • Old Norse: morna
  • Gothic: 𐌼𐌰𐌿𐍂𐌽𐌰𐌽 (maurnan)