Stated to be a loan from Proto-Iranian, comparing Ossetian мӕсыг (mæsyg, “tower”). However, according to Brust, this must be regarded as uncertain. Furnée follows a proposal by Kretschmer, that the word is from a non-Indo-European substrate source.
However, compare Old Church Slavonic сꙑнъ (synŭ, “tower”) which is considered to be borrowed from Turkic.
μόσσῡν • (móssūn) m (genitive μόσσῡνος); third declension
Case / # | Singular | Dual | Plural | ||||||||||
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Nominative | ὁ μόσσῡν ho móssūn |
τὼ μόσσῡνε tṑ móssūne |
οἱ μόσσῡνες hoi móssūnes | ||||||||||
Genitive | τοῦ μόσσῡνος toû móssūnos |
τοῖν μοσσῡ́νοιν toîn mossū́noin |
τῶν μοσσῡ́νων tôn mossū́nōn | ||||||||||
Dative | τῷ μόσσῡνῐ tôi móssūni |
τοῖν μοσσῡ́νοιν toîn mossū́noin |
τοῖς μόσσῡσῐ / μόσσῡσῐν toîs móssūsi(n) | ||||||||||
Accusative | τὸν μόσσῡνᾰ tòn móssūna |
τὼ μόσσῡνε tṑ móssūne |
τοὺς μόσσῡνᾰς toùs móssūnas | ||||||||||
Vocative | μόσσῡν móssūn |
μόσσῡνε móssūne |
μόσσῡνες móssūnes | ||||||||||
Notes: |
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