< Reconstruction:Proto-Slavic

Reconstruction:Proto-Slavic/skoba

Proto-Slavic

Etymology

Uncertain origin. The lemma exhibits semantic and phonetic parallels with Lithuanian kabė (hook), Lithuanian kablỹs (cramp) (both from Lithuanian kabėti (to hang)), Latvian kablis (clasp), which generally point towards an origin from pre-Balto-Slavic **(s)kebʰ-. Indo-European data outside of Balto-Slavic, however, alludes an origin from a nasal root with glottalic coda *(s)kemb- (to bend), which gave Lithuanian kìbti (to hang up), Proto-Germanic *humpaz (hump) (0-grade), Proto-Germanic *hampą (happiness) (o-grade), Latin scamnum (bench) (and its diminutive Latin scabellum), Ancient Greek κόμβος (kómbos, node), Proto-Celtic *kambos (twisted, crooked), Sanskrit स्कम्भ (skambhá, pole), and plausibly Proto-Germanic *skup- (barn, shop).

It is possible that the Slavic root was denasalized under the same conditions as *voda < proto-Balto-Slavic *wandō, which blocked the effect of Winter's law.

Noun

*skobà f

  1. bracket

Inflection

  • *kobь (fate)
  • *prokoba (doom)

Descendants

  • Old East Slavic: скоба (skoba)
  • South Slavic:
    • Old Church Slavonic:
      Old Cyrillic: скоба (skoba)
      Glagolitic: ⱄⰽⱁⰱⰰ (skoba)
    • Bulgarian: скоба́ (skobá)
    • Macedonian: ско́ба (skóba)
    • Serbo-Croatian:
      Cyrillic: ско̏ба
      Latin: skо̏ba
    • Slovene: skȯ́bа (tonal orthography)
  • West Slavic:
    • Czech: skoba
    • Polish: skobel
    • Lower Sorbian: skobla (key)

References

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