Reconstruction:Proto-Indo-European/dʰóh₁mos
Proto-Indo-European
Etymology
From *dʰeh₁- (“to do; to put, place”) + *-mos (action or result suffix).
Noun
*dʰóh₁mos m (non-ablauting)[1]
Inflection
| Thematic | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| singular | |||
| nominative | *dʰóh₁mos | ||
| genitive | *dʰóh₁mosyo | ||
| singular | dual | plural | |
| nominative | *dʰóh₁mos | *dʰóh₁moh₁ | *dʰóh₁moes |
| vocative | *dʰóh₁me | *dʰóh₁moh₁ | *dʰóh₁moes |
| accusative | *dʰóh₁mom | *dʰóh₁moh₁ | *dʰóh₁moms |
| genitive | *dʰóh₁mosyo | *? | *dʰóh₁moHom |
| ablative | *dʰóh₁mead | *? | *dʰóh₁momos, *dʰóh₁mobʰos |
| dative | *dʰóh₁moey | *? | *dʰóh₁momos, *dʰóh₁mobʰos |
| locative | *dʰóh₁mey, *dʰóh₁moy | *? | *dʰóh₁moysu |
| instrumental | *dʰóh₁moh₁ | *? | *dʰóh₁mōys |
Descendants
- Proto-Germanic: *dōmaz (see there for further descendants)
- Proto-Hellenic: *tʰōmos
- Ancient Greek: θωμός (thōmós)
References
- ^ Ringe, Donald (2006) From Proto-Indo-European to Proto-Germanic (A Linguistic History of English; 1)[1], Oxford: Oxford University Press, →ISBN