ππ°πΉπΊπ½π
Gothic
Etymology
From Proto-Germanic *taikniz, related to *taiknΔ .
Declension
There is one instance of ππ°πΉπΊπ½ (taikn) (Thessalonians II 1:5) which may instead be a form of an otherwise unattested a-stem neuter noun *ππ°πΉπΊπ½ (*taikn); however, this is ambiguous. It is not clear from the context whether it is a nominative or accusative singular form. If nominative, that particular attestation is definitely an a-stem neuter noun. If accusative, it could still belong to an a-stem neuter noun, but would more likely just be a form of this i-stem feminine noun, of which multiple unambiguous forms are already attested.
Feminine i-stem | ||
---|---|---|
Singular | Plural | |
Nominative | ππ°πΉπΊπ½π taikns |
ππ°πΉπΊπ½π΄πΉπ taikneis |
Vocative | ππ°πΉπΊπ½ taikn |
ππ°πΉπΊπ½π΄πΉπ taikneis |
Accusative | ππ°πΉπΊπ½ taikn |
ππ°πΉπΊπ½πΉπ½π taiknins |
Genitive | ππ°πΉπΊπ½π°πΉπ taiknais |
ππ°πΉπΊπ½π΄ taiknΔ |
Dative | ππ°πΉπΊπ½π°πΉ taiknai |
ππ°πΉπΊπ½πΉπΌ taiknim |
This article is issued from Wiktionary. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.