sabaru
Old Tupi
Etymology
Borrowed from Portuguese sábado, from Old Galician-Portuguese sabado, from Latin sabbatum, borrowed from Ancient Greek σάββατον (sábbaton), borrowed from Biblical Hebrew שַׁבָּת, possibly borrowed from Akkadian šapattum.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): [sa.β̞aˈɾu]
- Rhymes: -u
- Hyphenation: sa‧ba‧ru
Noun
sabaru (possessable) (Língua Geral Amazônica)
Descendants
- Nheengatu: saurú
See also
- days of the week: porabykyara (appendix): putu'u · porabykypy · porabykymokõî · porabykymosapyr · so'opapaba · îekuakuba · sabaru [edit]
References
- João de Arronches (1739) “SABADO”, in Caderno da Lingua (overall work in Portuguese); republished as “O caderno da lingua ou Vocabulario Portuguez-Tupi”, in Plínio Ayrosa, editor, Revista do Museu Paulista, volume XXI, São Paulo: Imprensa Official do Estado, 1934, page 282: “çabarú”
- Anton Meisterburg (a. 1756) “sabbatho”, in [Dicionário de Trier] (overall work in Portuguese and Old Tupi), Baixo Xingu, Pará, page 15, column 1, line 8; republished as Jean-Claude Muller et al., editors, Dicionário de língua geral amazônica, Potsdam: University of Potsdam, 2019, , page 151: “sabarù”
- anonymous author (c. 1757) “Sabbado”, in [Vocabulario Portuguez–Brasilico] (overall work in Portuguese); republished as Ernesto Ferreira França, compiler, Chrestomathia da lingua brazilica, Leipzig: F. A. Brockhaus, 1859, page 50: “saberû”
- anonymous author (18th century) “ſabado”, in Diccionario da lingua brazilica [Dictionary of the Brasílica Language][1] (overall work in Old Tupi and Portuguese), page 61: “ſabarû”