Reconstruction:Proto-West Germanic/hōkīn
Proto-West Germanic
Etymology
From *hōk (“buck, goat”) + *-īn (diminutive ending). According to Kroonen, borrowed from a non-Indo-European substrate language.[1] Possibly cognate with Proto-Slavic *kozà (e.g. Russian коза́ (kozá, “goat”), Serbo-Croatian ко̀за (“goat”) and Old Church Slavonic коза (koza, “goat”)), however common Indo-European inheritance is impossible due to the absence of application of Winter's law in the Slavic forms. Compare also Albanian kedh (“kid”).
Noun
*hōkīn n[1]
Inflection
| Neuter a-stem | ||
|---|---|---|
| Singular | ||
| Nominative | *hōkīn | |
| Genitive | *hōkīnas | |
| Singular | Plural | |
| Nominative | *hōkīn | *hōkīnu |
| Accusative | *hōkīn | *hōkīnu |
| Genitive | *hōkīnas | *hōkīnō |
| Dative | *hōkīnē | *hōkīnum |
| Instrumental | *hōkīnu | *hōkīnum |
Descendants
- Old English: hēċen
- Old Saxon: *hōkīn
- Old Dutch: *hōkīn
- Middle Dutch: hoekijn