Reconstruction:Proto-West Germanic/kulljandr
Proto-West Germanic
Etymology
Borrowed from Medieval Latin coliandrum, *coliandra, and later reenforced by Latin coriandrum and Old French coriandre.
Noun
*kulljandr n
Inflection
| Neuter a-stem | ||
|---|---|---|
| Singular | ||
| Nominative | *kulljandr | |
| Genitive | *kulljandras | |
| Singular | Plural | |
| Nominative | *kulljandr | *kulljandru |
| Accusative | *kulljandr | *kulljandru |
| Genitive | *kulljandras | *kulljandrō |
| Dative | *kulljandrē | *kulljandrum |
| Instrumental | *kulljandru | *kulljandrum |
Alternative reconstructions
- *kolljandr, *korjandr, *kolljandrā
Descendants
- Old English: cœlender n, cœlendre, cellendre, cylendre, coliandre f
- Middle English: coriandre, cellendre, coliandre, coliaundre, colliander, colyandre, colyaundre, coriaunder, coryandry, coryaundre
- English: coriander
- Scots: corrydander
- Middle English: coriandre, cellendre, coliandre, coliaundre, colliander, colyandre, colyaundre, coriaunder, coryandry, coryaundre
- Old Saxon: kullundar
- >? Old Dutch: *kullandar, *koriander
- Old High German: kullantar, koriander m