Reconstruction:Proto-Indo-European/sokʷh₂ṓy
Proto-Indo-European
Etymology
From *sekʷ- (“to follow”) + *-éh₂ (action noun suffix) + *-ṓy (animate deverbal/denominal suffix).
Noun
Inflection
| Athematic, hysterokinetic | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| singular | |||
| nominative | *sokʷh₂ṓy | ||
| genitive | *sokʷh₂yés | ||
| singular | dual | plural | |
| nominative | *sokʷh₂ṓy | *sokʷh₂óyh₁(e) | *sokʷh₂óyes |
| vocative | *sokʷh₂óy | *sokʷh₂óyh₁(e) | *sokʷh₂óyes |
| accusative | *sokʷh₂ṓm | *sokʷh₂óyh₁(e) | *sokʷh₂óym̥s |
| genitive | *sokʷh₂yés | *? | *sokʷh₂yóHom |
| ablative | *sokʷh₂yés | *? | *sokʷh₂imós, *sokʷh₂ibʰós |
| dative | *sokʷh₂yéy | *? | *sokʷh₂imós, *sokʷh₂ibʰós |
| locative | *sokʷh₂óy, *sokʷh₂ṓy | *? | *sokʷh₂isú |
| instrumental | *sokʷh₂yéh₁ | *? | *sokʷh₂imís, *sokʷh₂ibʰís |
Derived terms
Descendants
- Proto-Germanic: *sagjaz (“retainer, warrior”) (see there for further descendants)
- Proto-Indo-Iranian: *sákʰā (“friend, companion”) (see there for further descendants)
- Proto-Italic: *sokjos
References
- ^ Kroonen, Guus (2013) “*sagja- 1”, in Etymological Dictionary of Proto-Germanic (Leiden Indo-European Etymological Dictionary Series; 11)[1], Leiden, Boston: Brill, →ISBN, page 420
- ^ Yates, Anthony D. (2019) “Suffixal* o-vocalism without “amphikinesis:” On Proto-Indo-European*–oi-stems and ablaut as a diagnostic for word stress”, in David M. Goldstein, Stephanie W. Jamison, and Brent Vine, editors, Proceedings of the 30th Annual UCLA Indo-European Conference