Eur-Aryan roots Volume 1; with their English derivatives and the corresponding words in the cognate languages compared and systematically arranged
Book Details
Author(s)Joseph Baly
PublisherRareBooksClub.com
ISBN / ASIN1130501418
ISBN-139781130501414
AvailabilityUsually ships in 24 hours
Sales Rank99,999,999
MarketplaceUnited States 🇺🇸
Description
This historic book may have numerous typos and missing text. Purchasers can download a free scanned copy of the original book (without typos) from the publisher. Not indexed. Not illustrated. 1897 Excerpt: ...a corn, 0. Ir. graiime, a little grain, Ir. grainseach, grange, farm, grainseoir, an overseer, a granger (perhaps loan-words), grainthe, hoariness; Gael, grinneal, bottom of the sea, gravel, Ir. grinniol, bed of the sea, sea-bottom, sand of the sea.3 English Dekivatives. Greek, «gerat urn, name of a flower. Latin, granule,-ate,-ation, granary. L. Latin and Romance, grain (in all its senses), engrain, grange, 1 Kluge suggests as probable a Teutonic base kerno-= cream, for the O.N. kirna, A.S. cyrnan, to churn, i.e. to extract butter from the milk. 1 л/men-, to elate the lipi or eyet, cp. Gk. fioai, цио-т-Ьрюу, myitery, pvwria, ihort tight, Lat matas, mate, Eng. matter, &c. v'ghy-, to grind, and ger-, to rub, grind, near amay, grow old, are probably connected аи dialectic variants, and the derivatives, as far as their meaning is concerned, may be referred to either root, but etymologically it is necessary to place some of them ander one form, some under the other: e.g. Lat. fricare to-/фат-; Teut. corn under ger-. Lat. granas, Celt, gran, &c., can be referred to either, but A.S. grindan and Eng. grind can only be referred to л/ghj-. Granger, Grainger (surnames), garner, garnet, granite, pomegranate, granadilla, grenade, grenadier, curmudgeon (for corn-mudgin). Teutonic, corn, peppercorn, &c., corned (beef), i.e. covered with grains of salt, churn. Eur-Ar. VGpj, or VGT/EL, with variants VGEÇbVGE?L, to kindle, blaze, glow, shine. Sanscrit, jval-, in jval-ati, to burn, jvâlayati, to set on fire, Hindi jalna, to burn, jalâna, to kindle, light up. Teutonic, o.H.G. cholo, N.h.g. kohle, O.n. kol, A.s. col, M.e. cole, N.e. coal, Dan. cul, orig. a ...
