erchan
Old High German
Etymology
Apparently from Proto-Germanic *erknaz, thus cognate with ๐ฐ๐น๐๐บ๐ฝ๐ (airkns, โholy, pure (of faith)โ) and Old English eorcnanstan (โprecious stone, gemโ) (see eorcnan, erce). An archaic Germanic word from the sacral sphere, its original meaning is difficult to reconstruct as it belonged to the pagan religious vocabulary obscured after Christianization.
Pokorny (1959) tentatively groups the word with Proto-Indo-European *hโerวต- (โglittering, whiteโ) (compare Ancient Greek แผฯฮณฯฯ (argรณs), Latin argentum), but Gothic ๐ฐ๐๐บ- (ark-) may also be an early loan of (แผฯฯฮน- (arkhi-, โarchi-โ)); compare Ulfilan ๐ฐ๐๐บ๐ฐ๐ฒ๐ฒ๐น๐ป๐ฟ๐ (arkaggilus) for archangelus.
Adjective
erchan
- sublime, chief, special, egregious, genuine, true (?)
- der erchano sangheri (=egregius psaltes, Isaiah 4:2)
- ercna euua (=certa lege Isaiah 2:1)
- allero specierum erchenosta (=speciem specialissimam)
- Also ih tes mennisken boteh einen toten mennisken heizo, nals nicht erchenen mennisken (Notker trans. Boethius 5 = Nam uti cadauer hominem mortuum dixeris, simpliciter uero hominem appellare non possis "For though you might call a cadaver 'a dead man', you cannot just simply call it 'a man' [viz. it is not genuinely a man].")
Derived terms
- erchanpruoder (โfull brother, germanusโ)
Descendants
- German: Erchtag (โTuesdayโ) (archaic, Bavarian)
References
- Eberhard Gottlieb Graff, Hans Ferdinand Massmann, Althochdeutscher Sprachschatz, oder, Wรถrterbuch der althochdeutschen Sprache, 1834, p. 468.
- Grimm, Deutsche Mythologie (1835, trans. Stallybrass 1888), 113; 182โ185.
- Bopp, Comparative Grammar (1815, trans. Eastwick 1862), p. 1285.
- Hjalmar Falk, Alf Torp, Wortschatz der germanischen Spracheinheit, part 3, 5th ed., Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht, 1979, โISBN, p. 26.
- Lorenz Diefenbach, Vergleichendes Wรถrterbuch der gotischen Sprache, J. Baer, 1851 p. 23.
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