wicca

See also: Wicca

Finnish

Noun

wicca

  1. Wicca (neo-pagan religion)
  2. Wiccan (follower of this religion)

Declension

Inflection of wicca (Kotus type 9/kala, no gradation)
nominative wicca wiccat
genitive wiccan wiccojen
partitive wiccaa wiccoja
illative wiccaan wiccoihin
singular plural
nominative wicca wiccat
accusative nom. wicca wiccat
gen. wiccan
genitive wiccan wiccojen
wiccainrare
partitive wiccaa wiccoja
inessive wiccassa wiccoissa
elative wiccasta wiccoista
illative wiccaan wiccoihin
adessive wiccalla wiccoilla
ablative wiccalta wiccoilta
allative wiccalle wiccoille
essive wiccana wiccoina
translative wiccaksi wiccoiksi
instructive wiccoin
abessive wiccatta wiccoitta
comitative wiccoineen

Synonyms

Derived terms


Italian

Noun

wicca f (invariable)

  1. Wicca

Old English

FWOTD – 7 June 2014

Alternative forms

Etymology

From Proto-Germanic *wikkô (necromancer, sorcerer).

Further etymology uncertain; apparently from Proto-Indo-European *weik- (separate, divide), conjectured to be because of early Germanic divinatory practices to do with casting lots.

The exact etymology is problematic. R. Lühr (Expressivität und Lautgesetz im Germanischen, Heidelberg (1988), p. 354) connects wigol "prophetic, mantic", wīglian "to practice divination" (Middle Low German wichelen (bewitch) and suggests Proto-Germanic *wigōn, via Kluge's law becoming *wikkōn. The basic form would then be the feminine, wicce /ˈwɪt͡ʃe/, from *wikkæ, from *wikkōn with palatalization due to the preceding i and the following , from *ōn. The palatal -cc- /t͡ʃ/ in wicca would then be analogous to the feminine.

An alternative possibility is to derive the palatal /t͡ʃ/ directly from the verb wiccian, from *wikkija (OED, s.v. witch). Lühr conversely favours derivation of this verb from the noun. The Proto-Indo-European root from which these words are derived is *weik- (to separate, to divide), probably via early Germanic divinatory practices involving Cleromancy (casting lots).

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /ˈwit.t͡ʃːɑ/

Noun

wiċċa m

  1. wizard, sorcerer, magician, druid, necromancer
    • c. 890, Ælfred, Domboc, Prologue
      Ða fæmnan þe gewuniað onfon gealdorcræftigan ⁊ scinlæcan ⁊ wiccan, ne læt þu ða libban.
      Women who are accustomed to receiving enchanters and sorceresses and witches, do not let them live.

Descendants

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