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Reconstruction:Proto-Germanic/Masō. In DICTIOUS you will not only get to know all the dictionary meanings for the word
Reconstruction:Proto-Germanic/Masō, but we will also tell you about its etymology, its characteristics and you will know how to say
Reconstruction:Proto-Germanic/Masō in singular and plural. Everything you need to know about the word
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Proto-Germanic
Etymology
From a Celtic language, presumably Proto-Celtic *Mosā. Despite the obvious similarities, the name is not derived from Latin Mosa. It shows evidence of the change from of o to a; this is known to have occurred before the first contact of Germanic people with the Romans, but probably after first contact with the Celts. Most likely, Latin and Germanic both borrowed the name from Celtic independently.
Albrecht Greule writes that its ultimate origin is unclear, but could perhaps be Proto-Indo-European *meh₂d-, whence Latin madeō (“I am wet”) and Ancient Greek μεστός (mestós, “full”).[1] Or, from Proto-Indo-European *mā- (“to stupefy”) in the sense of the river's tortuousness, cognate with Proto-Germanic *masōną (“to confound, be weary, dream”) (modern English maze), Welsh mydu (“to vault, arch”), Old Norse meis (“curvatura”).[2]
Pronunciation
Proper noun
*Masō f
- the river Meuse
Inflection
ō-stemDeclension of *Masō (ō-stem)
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singular
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plural
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nominative
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*Masō
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*Masôz
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vocative
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*Masō
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*Masôz
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accusative
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*Masǭ
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*Masōz
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genitive
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*Masōz
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*Masǫ̂
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dative
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*Masōi
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*Masōmaz
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instrumental
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*Masō
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*Masōmiz
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Descendants
- Proto-West Germanic: *Masu
References
- ^ Greule, Albrecht (2014) “Maas”, in Deutsches Gewässernamenbuch: Etymologie der Gewässernamen und der dazugehörigen Gebiets-, Siedlungs- und Flurnamen, Berlin: Walter de Gruyter, →ISBN, page 333b
- ^ Ferguson, Robert (1862): The River-names of Europe, p. 142