Zum idg. Adjektivsuffix *-ṷent-im thrakischen und slavischen
The PIE adjectival suffix *-ṷent-in thracian and slavic
Abstract
The paper deals with possible traces of the Indo-European adjective suffix *-ṷent-/ *-ṷn̥ t-in the onomastic remnants of Thracian and Slavic languages, some of them already assumed by Vladimir Georgiev (*aps-ynth-‘rich in aspen trees' as underlying the names of a tribe, their land, a river and a town in it to the north of the Thracian Chersonesos; Thrac. epiclesis of Aphrodite Zēr-ynthía: ‘rich in wild animals’, a kind of pótnia thērôn) and by the author himself (Gk Simó-eis,-entos, a river in Troad lt Thrac. *zimo-wenϑ-= OInd. himá-vant-‘snowy’ of mountains, here of a mountain stream, cf. Gk. *kheimá-rhous ‘winter-flowing’). To these instances the epiclesis of Hera Rhēsk-ynthís is added, presumably deriving from the stem rēsk-(also raisk-, resk-) of unknown meaning but well-attested in Thracian anthroponymy. As for the Slavic evidence, the adjective *bogovętъ ‘blessed’ (in the phrase ‘every blessed day’, only Serbo-Croatian and Slovak) is taken into consideration as a possible count...erpart to OInd. bhagavant-, but the interpretation by Marta Bjeletić as a compound of *bogъ ‘God’ and *ęti ‘take’ seems more plausible. The remaining discussion focuses on the intriguing possibility that the Common Slavic comparative *vęt-jь,vęt-ьši suppletive to *velьjь ‘big, large, great’ is somewhat connected with *-ṷent-, either as arisen from the adjectives in *-ṷent-by the way of decomposition or inversely, as reflecting a root noun which was to become, by the way of composition, an adjective suffix known from other IE languages.
Keywords:
Thracian / Suffix *-ṷent / Slavic / Indo-Europaean / Comparative *vętjь ‘greater’Source:
Linguistique Balkanique, 2020, 59, 1, 62-75Publisher:
- Institute for Bulgarian Language
Institution/Community
Klasične nauke / Classical StudiesTY - JOUR AU - Loma, Aleksandar PY - 2020 UR - http://reff.f.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/3120 AB - The paper deals with possible traces of the Indo-European adjective suffix *-ṷent-/ *-ṷn̥ t-in the onomastic remnants of Thracian and Slavic languages, some of them already assumed by Vladimir Georgiev (*aps-ynth-‘rich in aspen trees' as underlying the names of a tribe, their land, a river and a town in it to the north of the Thracian Chersonesos; Thrac. epiclesis of Aphrodite Zēr-ynthía: ‘rich in wild animals’, a kind of pótnia thērôn) and by the author himself (Gk Simó-eis,-entos, a river in Troad lt Thrac. *zimo-wenϑ-= OInd. himá-vant-‘snowy’ of mountains, here of a mountain stream, cf. Gk. *kheimá-rhous ‘winter-flowing’). To these instances the epiclesis of Hera Rhēsk-ynthís is added, presumably deriving from the stem rēsk-(also raisk-, resk-) of unknown meaning but well-attested in Thracian anthroponymy. As for the Slavic evidence, the adjective *bogovętъ ‘blessed’ (in the phrase ‘every blessed day’, only Serbo-Croatian and Slovak) is taken into consideration as a possible counterpart to OInd. bhagavant-, but the interpretation by Marta Bjeletić as a compound of *bogъ ‘God’ and *ęti ‘take’ seems more plausible. The remaining discussion focuses on the intriguing possibility that the Common Slavic comparative *vęt-jь,vęt-ьši suppletive to *velьjь ‘big, large, great’ is somewhat connected with *-ṷent-, either as arisen from the adjectives in *-ṷent-by the way of decomposition or inversely, as reflecting a root noun which was to become, by the way of composition, an adjective suffix known from other IE languages. PB - Institute for Bulgarian Language T2 - Linguistique Balkanique T1 - Zum idg. Adjektivsuffix *-ṷent-im thrakischen und slavischen T1 - The PIE adjectival suffix *-ṷent-in thracian and slavic EP - 75 IS - 1 SP - 62 VL - 59 UR - https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_reff_3120 ER -
@article{ author = "Loma, Aleksandar", year = "2020", abstract = "The paper deals with possible traces of the Indo-European adjective suffix *-ṷent-/ *-ṷn̥ t-in the onomastic remnants of Thracian and Slavic languages, some of them already assumed by Vladimir Georgiev (*aps-ynth-‘rich in aspen trees' as underlying the names of a tribe, their land, a river and a town in it to the north of the Thracian Chersonesos; Thrac. epiclesis of Aphrodite Zēr-ynthía: ‘rich in wild animals’, a kind of pótnia thērôn) and by the author himself (Gk Simó-eis,-entos, a river in Troad lt Thrac. *zimo-wenϑ-= OInd. himá-vant-‘snowy’ of mountains, here of a mountain stream, cf. Gk. *kheimá-rhous ‘winter-flowing’). To these instances the epiclesis of Hera Rhēsk-ynthís is added, presumably deriving from the stem rēsk-(also raisk-, resk-) of unknown meaning but well-attested in Thracian anthroponymy. As for the Slavic evidence, the adjective *bogovętъ ‘blessed’ (in the phrase ‘every blessed day’, only Serbo-Croatian and Slovak) is taken into consideration as a possible counterpart to OInd. bhagavant-, but the interpretation by Marta Bjeletić as a compound of *bogъ ‘God’ and *ęti ‘take’ seems more plausible. The remaining discussion focuses on the intriguing possibility that the Common Slavic comparative *vęt-jь,vęt-ьši suppletive to *velьjь ‘big, large, great’ is somewhat connected with *-ṷent-, either as arisen from the adjectives in *-ṷent-by the way of decomposition or inversely, as reflecting a root noun which was to become, by the way of composition, an adjective suffix known from other IE languages.", publisher = "Institute for Bulgarian Language", journal = "Linguistique Balkanique", title = "Zum idg. Adjektivsuffix *-ṷent-im thrakischen und slavischen, The PIE adjectival suffix *-ṷent-in thracian and slavic", pages = "75-62", number = "1", volume = "59", url = "https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_reff_3120" }
Loma, A.. (2020). Zum idg. Adjektivsuffix *-ṷent-im thrakischen und slavischen. in Linguistique Balkanique Institute for Bulgarian Language., 59(1), 62-75. https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_reff_3120
Loma A. Zum idg. Adjektivsuffix *-ṷent-im thrakischen und slavischen. in Linguistique Balkanique. 2020;59(1):62-75. https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_reff_3120 .
Loma, Aleksandar, "Zum idg. Adjektivsuffix *-ṷent-im thrakischen und slavischen" in Linguistique Balkanique, 59, no. 1 (2020):62-75, https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_reff_3120 .