ozols

See also: Ozols

Latvian

Ozols

Etymology

From Proto-Baltic *anžōl-, *anžōn- (later o-stem *anzuol-as), from Proto-Indo-European *anǵōl-, *anǵōn-. The origin of the latter stem is disputed.

  • Some derive it from *gʷel- (acorn);
  • others compare it to Proto-Slavic *ǫzlъ (knot) (cf. Russian узел (uzel)), suggesting that the original meaning of ozols was "knotty, knobby, knobbly";
  • others see a connection with an earlier adjective *anžola- (knobby, tuberous), from *anža (knob, tuber) (earlier "narrow, compressed");
  • others yet derive it from Proto-Indo-European *angʷ(h)i- (snake), parallel form *anǵ- — assuming that it originally had the meaning of 'pierce, hollow' —, apparently because old oaks often have holes or hollow parts (cf. the parallel case of Russian дуб (dub), Old Church Slavonic дѫбъ (dǫbŭ) "oak", cognate with Latvian dobums "hollow, cavity").

Cognates include Lithuanian ą́žuolas, Old Prussian ansonis ([anzōnis]).[1]

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): [uôzuols]

Noun

ozols m (1st declension)

  1. oak tree (genus Quercus)
    ozolu birzsoak grove
    korķa ozols, korķozolscork oak
    vīrs kā ozolsa man like an oak tree (= very strong)
  2. oak wood
    ozola galds, skapis, krēslsan oak table, cupboard, chair

Declension

Derived terms

See also

References

  1. Karulis, Konstantīns (1992), ozols”, in Latviešu Etimoloģijas Vārdnīca (in Latvian), Rīga: AVOTS, →ISBN
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