Reconstruction:Proto-West Germanic/strūb
Proto-West Germanic
Etymology
From earlier *streubaz, from Proto-Indo-European *strewbʰ-o-s, from *strewbʰ-, itself perhaps a labial extension of *strew- (“to spread, strew”).[1]
Adjective
*strūb
Inflection
| a-stem | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Singular | Masculine | ||
| Nominative | *strūb | ||
| Genitive | *strūbas | ||
| Singular | Masculine | Feminine | Neuter |
| Nominative | *strūb | *strūbu | *strūb |
| Accusative | *strūbanā | *strūbā | *strūb |
| Genitive | *strūbas | *strūbeʀā | *strūbas |
| Dative | *strūbumē | *strūbeʀē | *strūbumē |
| Instrumental | *strūbu | *strūbeʀu | *strūbu |
| Plural | Masculine | Feminine | Neuter |
| Nominative | *strūbē | *strūbō | *strūbu |
| Accusative | *strūbā | *strūbā | *strūbu |
| Genitive | *strūbeʀō | *strūbeʀō | *strūbeʀō |
| Dative | *strūbēm, *strūbum | *strūbēm, *strūbum | *strūbēm, *strūbum |
| Instrumental | *strūbēm, *strūbum | *strūbēm, *strūbum | *strūbēm, *strūbum |
Derived terms
Descendants
- Old Saxon: strūf
- Middle Low German: strūf
- Old Dutch: *strūf
- Old High German: strūb
- Middle High German: strūp
- German: strupp (dialectal)
- Middle High German: strūp
References
- ^ Wolfgang Pfeifer, editor (1993), “sträuben”, in Etymologisches Wörterbuch des Deutschen (in German), 2nd edition, Berlin: Akademie-Verlag, →ISBN