|
|
This Proto-West Germanic entry contains reconstructed terms and roots. As such, the term(s) in this entry are not directly attested, but are hypothesized to have existed based on comparative evidence.
|
Proto-West Germanic
Etymology
Borrowed from Late Latin parafrēdus, palafrēdus, paravrēdus, from Latin paraverēdus.
Noun
*parafred m
- horse
- Synonyms: *ehw, *hross, *marh, *wigi
Inflection
| Masculine a-stem
|
|
|
Singular
|
| Nominative
|
*parafred
|
| Genitive
|
*parafredas
|
|
|
Singular
|
Plural
|
| Nominative
|
*parafred
|
*parafredō, *parafredōs
|
| Accusative
|
*parafred
|
*parafredā
|
| Genitive
|
*parafredas
|
*parafredō
|
| Dative
|
*parafredē
|
*parafredum
|
| Instrumental
|
*parafredu
|
*parafredum
|
Descendants
- Old Frisian: perd
- Old Saxon: parafreth
- Old Dutch: *parifrid, *perid
- Middle Dutch: pert
- Dutch: paard, perd, peerd (dialectal)
- Limburgish: paerd
- West Flemish: peird
- Old High German: pfarifrit, pharifrit, pharafrit, pferit, pherit, pherfrit
- Middle High German: phërt, pfërt, pfërit, pfaerît n
- Central Franconian: Pääd, Perd (chiefly Moselle Franconian), Päärd (Siegerland Moselle Franconian)
- Hunsrik: Peerd, Peer, Pied
- Luxembourgish: Päerd
- Transylvanian Saxon: Faard
- East Central German:
- Erzgebirgisch: [ˈpfaːɰ]
- Silesian East Central German: Faard
- Vilamovian: faod
- German: Pferd
- Rhine Franconian: Pääd, Päär, Per, Perd
- Frankfurterisch: [fæː(ɐ̯)t]
- Yiddish: פֿערד (ferd)