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π½π°πΉππ
π°ππ°π½. In DICTIOUS you will not only get to know all the dictionary meanings for the word
π½π°πΉππ
π°ππ°π½, but we will also tell you about its etymology, its characteristics and you will know how to say
π½π°πΉππ
π°ππ°π½ in singular and plural. Everything you need to know about the word
π½π°πΉππ
π°ππ°π½ you have here. The definition of the word
π½π°πΉππ
π°ππ°π½ will help you to be more precise and correct when speaking or writing your texts. Knowing the definition of
π½π°πΉππ
π°ππ°π½, as well as those of other words, enriches your vocabulary and provides you with more and better linguistic resources.
Gothic
Etymology
Uncertain; see Lehmann 1986: 265; 332-333 for a more complete overview.
- The only attested form of this word, π½π°πΉππ
ππ (naiswΕr) was read as π½π°πΉπ
(naiw) by some early scholars, but that reading is now considered to be erroneous and the verb which was hypothesized to exist based on it is now widely considered a ghost word.
- Some have read the prefix of this word as an alteration or misspelling of π½πΉ (ni);
- Others consider the first element to be π½π°πΏπ (naus, βcorpseβ), rendering the meaning of the compound as to swear to death, that is, to swear or wish death upon another.
- Finally, some have read the first element as the prefix πΉπ½- (in-) altered by some means or another, perhaps a scribal mistake. This would make the term an exact calque of Ancient Greek αΌΞ½ΞΟΟ (enΓ©khΕ), which this Gothic word happens to translate.
Verb
π½π°πΉππ
π°ππ°π½ β’ (naiswaran)
- (hapax) to grudge
Conjugation
References
- Lehmann, Winfred, A Gothic Etymological Dictionary (Leiden 1986)