herizogo
Old High German
Alternative forms
- herizoho
Etymology
From Proto-West Germanic *harjatogō (“army leader”). Equivalent to heri (“army”) + *zogo (“leader”).[1]
Noun
herizogo m
Declension
| case | singular | plural |
|---|---|---|
| nominative | herizogo | herizogon, herizogun |
| accusative | herizogon, herizogun | herizogon, herizogun |
| genitive | herizogen, herizogin | herizogōno |
| dative | herizogen, herizogin | herizogōm, herizogōn |
Descendants
- Middle High German: herzoge, herzog
- German: Herzog, Hertzog (obsolete)
- → Albanian: hercog
- → Bulgarian: херцо́г (hercóg)
- → Saterland Frisian: Härtsoch
- → Georgian: ჰერცოგი (hercogi)
- → Hungarian: herceg
- → Latgalian: gercogs
- → Latvian: hercogs
- → Lithuanian: hercogas
- → Luxembourgish: Herzog
- → Ottoman Turkish: هرسك (hersek)
- → Russian: ге́рцог (gércog)
- → Translingual: Herzogiella
- → Ukrainian: ге́рцог (hércoh)
- → Saterland Frisian: Härtsoch
- → Serbo-Croatian: Херцег
- Serbo-Croatian: Хѐрцеговина
- → English: Herzegovina
- Serbo-Croatian: Хѐрцеговина
- Yiddish: הערצאָג (hertsog)
- → Slovak: herzog
- German: Herzog, Hertzog (obsolete)
References
- ^ Friedrich Kluge (1989) “Herzog”, in Elmar Seebold, editor, Etymologisches Wörterbuch der deutschen Sprache [Etymological Dictionary of the German Language] (in German), 22nd edition, Berlin: Walter de Gruyter, →ISBN