< Reconstruction:Proto-Indo-Iranian
Reconstruction:Proto-Indo-Iranian/ćasás
Proto-Indo-Iranian
Reconstruction
The Sanskrit शश (śaśa) is from an earlier *शस (śasa), with the first sibilant influencing the second[1]. The distant assimilation of Proto-Indo-Aryan *s to *ś in the neighborhood of another *ś in Sanskrit observed in Proto-Indo-Iranian *ĉasás > Proto-Indo-Aryan *śasás > Sanskrit शश (śaśá) is also found in *swáćuras > Proto-Indo-Aryan *swáśuras > Sanskrit श्वशुर (śváśura).[2] The second consonant of the Iranian descendants is /h/, pointing to PII *ĉasás.
Etymology
From Proto-Indo-European *ḱesós (“grey; hare”). Compare Latin cānus, Old English hara (English hare), Old Prussian sasnis (“hare”).
Derived terms
- *ĉasakas (diminutive)
- Indo-Aryan: *śasakas
- Iranian: *ĉahakah
- Avestan: 𐬯𐬀𐬵𐬏𐬖 (sahūγ)
- Old Persian: *θahakaʰ
- Middle Persian: [script needed] (shwk' /sahōg/)
- Parachi: sahȫk
- Chorasmian: [script needed] (s'k)
- Yidgha: sīɣ
Descendants
References
- Turner, Ralph Lilley (1969–1985), “śaśá (12357)”, in A Comparative Dictionary of the Indo-Aryan Languages, London: Oxford University Press
- Monier Williams (1899), “Proto-Indo-Iranian/ćasás”, in A Sanskrit–English Dictionary, […], new edition, Oxford: At the Clarendon Press, OCLC 458052227, page 1060.
- Hock, Hans Henrich (1991) Principles of historical linguistics, Walter de Gruyter, page 130
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