πŒ³πŒΉπƒ-

Gothic

Etymology

Doublet of π„π…πŒΉπƒ- (twis-). Since the form lacks the expected effects of Grimm's law, it may be borrowed from or influenced by Latin dis-.[1] Otherwise the voiced onset could be explained as irregular lenition in an unstressed syllable. The details are unclear. Cognate to German zer-.

Prefix

πŒ³πŒΉπƒ- β€’ (dis-)

  1. apart, asunder, dis-
    β€ŽπŒ³πŒΉπƒ- (dis-) + β€Žπ…πŒΉπŒ»π…πŒ°πŒ½ (wilwan, β€œto plunder, rob”) β†’ β€ŽπŒ³πŒΉπƒπ…πŒΉπŒ»π…πŒ°πŒ½ (diswilwan, β€œto plunder completely, spoil”),

Derived terms

β–Ί <a class='CategoryTreeLabel CategoryTreeLabelNs14 CategoryTreeLabelCategory' href='/wiki/Category:Gothic_words_prefixed_with_%F0%90%8C%B3%F0%90%8C%B9%F0%90%8D%83-' title='Category:Gothic words prefixed with πŒ³πŒΉπƒ-'>Gothic words prefixed with πŒ³πŒΉπƒ-</a>

References

  1. Kluge, Friedrich (1989), β€œzer-”, in Elmar Seebold, editor, Etymologisches WΓΆrterbuch der deutschen Sprache [Etymological dictionary of the German language] (in German), 22nd edition, β†’ISBN
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