root <span class="searchmatch">Proto</span>-Indo-European *ḱer-, see also Latin corvus, <span class="searchmatch">Proto</span>-Germanic *hrabnaz. *<span class="searchmatch">śárˀkāˀ</span> f magpie East Baltic: Lithuanian: <span class="searchmatch">šárka</span> Samogitian: <span class="searchmatch">šarka</span> West...
From <span class="searchmatch">Proto</span>-<span class="searchmatch">Balto</span>-<span class="searchmatch">Slavic</span> *<span class="searchmatch">śárˀkāˀ</span>. Cognate with Lithuanian <span class="searchmatch">šárka</span> (“magpie”), Old Prussian sarke (“magpie”), Finnish harakka (“magpie”). Eventually connected...
*ḱer-, the latter whence Latin corvus, Proto-<span class="searchmatch">Balto</span>-<span class="searchmatch">Slavic</span> *<span class="searchmatch">śárˀkāˀ</span>. IPA(key): /ˈxrɑβ.ɔːː/ *hrabô m raven <span class="searchmatch">Proto</span>-West Germanic: *hrabn, *hrabō Old English:...
theories derived the word from a root <span class="searchmatch">Proto</span>-Indo-European *ḱer-, whence also Latin corvus, <span class="searchmatch">Proto</span>-<span class="searchmatch">Balto</span>-<span class="searchmatch">Slavic</span> *<span class="searchmatch">śárˀkāˀ</span>. (Can this(+) etymology be sourced...
Old East <span class="searchmatch">Slavic</span>. It is unclear whether Old East <span class="searchmatch">Slavic</span> цѣрь (cěrĭ, “sulfur”) is related. *sěra f sulfur * -asъ is the expected <span class="searchmatch">Balto</span>-<span class="searchmatch">Slavic</span> form but is...
Probably a <span class="searchmatch">Proto</span>-Baltic [Term?] loanword from the same root as Lithuanian žirgas (“steed”), Latvian zirgs (“horse”), suggesting earlier *<span class="searchmatch">šärkä</span> ← *žr̥gas...