Reconstruction:Proto-Sino-Tibetan/dzaʔ
Proto-Sino-Tibetan
Reconstruction
- Proto-Sino-Tibetan: *dzaʔ (Schuessler, 2007; Hill, 2019)
- Proto-Tibeto-Burman: *m-dz(y)a-k/n/t/s (Matisoff, STEDT); *dzya-n/k (Mortensen, 2012); *dza (Weidert, 1987; Michailovsky, 1991; Benedict, 1972); *dza-n ⪤ dza-k (Matisoff, 1983); *dzɑ (Chou, 1972)
Some consider Chinese 食 to be a reflex of this root; according to the latest reconstructions, 食 and its cognates are probably best listed under *mə-l(j)ək (“to lick”).
Compare Proto-Austroasiatic *ca(ː)ʔ (“to eat”).
Verb
*dzaʔ
Descendants
- Old Chinese: 咀 (*ʔsaʔ, zaʔ (ZS), “to taste, to savour”), 飵 / 𫗢 (*zaːg, zaːgs (ZS), “(ancient Chu dialect) to eat”), 餐 (*tsʰˁar (B-S, unlisted), *sʰaːn (ZS), “to eat”)
- (Note: 餐 may alternatively (and perhaps more preferably) be compared with WT འཚལ་བ ('tshal ba, “(archaic) to eat, to fill the belly”), ཚལ་མ (tshal ma, “breakfast”).)
- Himalayish
- rGyalrongic:
- Boro-Garo
- Garo: cha·a
- Lolo-Burmese
- Naic
See also
- *ʔam (“to eat; to drink”)
- *N/s-tuŋ (“to drink; to suckle”)
- *s(j)ok (“breast; to suck; to drink”)
- *m-liŋ ~ m-luŋ (“to drink”)
- *m/s/g-ljak (“to lick; tongue; to eat (of animals); to feed (animals)”)
- *b-ras (“rice”)