Reconstruction:Proto-West Germanic/bijakaʀjō
Proto-West Germanic
Etymology
From *bijakaʀ (“beehive”) + *-jō, or *bijā (“bee”) + *kaʀjō (“vessel-maker, potter”).
Noun
*bijakaʀjō m
Inflection
| Masculine an-stem | ||
|---|---|---|
| Singular | ||
| Nominative | *bijakaʀjō | |
| Genitive | *bijakaʀjini, *bijakaʀjan | |
| Singular | Plural | |
| Nominative | *bijakaʀjō | *bijakaʀjan |
| Accusative | *bijakaʀjan | *bijakaʀjan |
| Genitive | *bijakaʀjini, *bijakaʀjan | *bijakaʀjanō |
| Dative | *bijakaʀjini, *bijakaʀjan | *bijakaʀjum |
| Instrumental | *bijakaʀjini, *bijakaʀjan | *bijakaʀjum |
Alternative reconstructions
Synonyms
- *imbjakaʀjō
Descendants
- Old English: bēocere
- Old Saxon: *bīkerio
- Middle Low German: *bîkere, *bîker
- German Low German: Bieker
- Dutch Low Saxon: bijker
- → West Frisian: bijker, byker
- Middle Low German: *bîkere, *bîker
- Old Dutch: *bīkero
- Middle Dutch: *bîkere, *bîker
- Dutch: bijker (dialectal, possibly borrowed from Low German)
- Middle Dutch: *bîkere, *bîker
- → Medieval Latin: bigarus, bigrus (noun) (possibly borrowed from Old English)
Further reading
- Lloyd, Albert L., Lühr, Rosemarie (2014) “kar”, in Etymologisches Wörterbuch des Althochdeutschen[1] (in German), volume V: iba-luzzilo, Göttingen/Zürich: Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht, →ISBN, pages 399-400: “ae. -cere (in beocere ‚Imker‘), got. kasja m. ‚löpfer‘ < urgerm. *kasi̯an-”
- The template Template:R:nds:WWmM does not use the parameter(s):
ed=22
Please see Module:checkparams for help with this warning.Piirainen, Elisabeth, Elling, Wilhelm, editors (1992), “bîker”, in Wörterbuch der westmünsterländischen Mundart (Beiträge des Heimatvereins Vreden zur Landes- und Volkskunde; 40) (in German), Vreden: Heimatverein Vreden im Selbstverlag, →ISBN, page 31: “ags. beôcere. Gl. belg. biecaer of een biestoc. alveare G. byencare. alveola, alveare, alvearium T. alts. bikar, alvear. Gl. Arg. kar, gefäss.”