Change viewing parameters
Select another database

Germanic etymology :

Search within this database
Proto-Germanic: *uxsēn, pl. *uxsniz; *uxsu-z
Meaning: ox
IE etymology: IE etymology
Gothic: ɔhsa m. (n) `ox'
Old Norse: oxi, uxi m. `Ochs'
Norwegian: ukse
Swedish: oxe
Danish: okse
Old English: oxa, -an m.`ox'
English: ox
Old Frisian: oxa
Old Saxon: ohso
Middle Dutch: osse
Dutch: os m.
Middle Low German: osse
Old High German: ohso (8.Jh.)
Middle High German: ohse wk. m. 'ochse; gestirn Bootes'
German: Ochse m.
germet-meaning,germet-prnum,germet-got,germet-onord,germet-norw,germet-swed,germet-dan,germet-oengl,germet-engl,germet-ofris,germet-osax,germet-mdutch,germet-dutch,germet-mlg,germet-ohg,germet-mhg,germet-hg,

Search within this database


Indo-European etymology :

Search within this database
Proto-IE: *uks-
Meaning: bull, ox
Tokharian: A ops-, B okso `Rind, Stier' (PT *okso) (Adams 111)
Old Indian: ukṣán- m. `ox, bull'
Avestan: uxšan- 'Stier'
Germanic: *uxs-an- m., pl. *uxs-n-iz; *uxs-u- m.
Celtic: PBrit *uksō > *uchū, -ī: Cymr ych `Ochse', MCymr pl. ychen `Ochsen', NCymr pl. ychain `Ochsen', Bret pl. ouhen, oc'hen `Ochsen', pl. ohan `Ochsen'
Russ. meaning: скот (бык, вол)
References: WP I 248 f
piet-meaning,piet-tokh,piet-ind,piet-avest,piet-germ,piet-celt,piet-rusmean,piet-refer,

Search within this database


Pokorny's dictionary :

Search within this database
Number: 2102
Root: u̯egʷ- : ū̆gʷ-, ukʷs-
English meaning: wet; to irrigate; ox (?)
German meaning: `feucht; netzen'
Derivatives: ukʷsen- `Stier'
Material: Gr. ὑγρός `feucht, flüssig'; lat. ūvidus `feucht, naß' (daraus ūdus, wovon ūlīgo `die natürliche Feuchtigkeit des Bodens'), ūvor, -ōris `Feuchtigkeit, Nässe', ūvēscō, -ere `feucht werden, sich betrinken', ūvēns `feucht, naß' (setzen ein *ūvos aus *ūgʷo-s voraus); ūmeō, -ēre `feucht sein', ūmor `Feuchtigkeit', ūmectō `befeuchte' (beruhen auf *ūgʷsmos); mir. fūal `Urin' (*u̯ogʷ-lo-);

    aisl. vǫkr (Akk. vǫkuan) `feucht', vǫkvi m., vǫkva f. `Nässe', wozu aisl. vøkva, vekkja `(Blut) vergießen, fließen lassen', vǫk f. (*vakvō) `offene (nasse) Stelle im Eise', mnd. wake f. `Loch im Eise', ndl. wak `feucht, naß', engl. (aus dem Nord.) wake `Kielwasser';

    s-Erweit.: ai. ukṣáti `befeuchtet, besprengt', av. uxšyeiti `sprüht' (vom Wasser und Feuer);

    dazu (mit demselben Verhältn. wie ai. vr̥šan- `männlich', lat. verrēs: ai. varṣá-m `Regen', s. u̯er- `feuchten') idg. ukʷsen- `Stier, Tiermännchen' in: ai. ukṣā́ m., av. uxšan- `Stier' (dazu? fem. *ukʷsōr `die Besprengte' > lat. uxor `Gattin'); cymr. ych `Ochs' (= idg. *ukʷsō, urbrit. *uchū > , mit Umlaut ych), Pl. mcymr. ychen, ncymr. ychain, bret. ouhen, oc'hen, corn. ohan `Ochsen', mir. oss `Hirsch'; PN Os-car `hirschliebend', Demin. Oissín `Ossian'; got. aúhsus (Gen. Pl. auhsne), aisl. oxi, ags. oxa, ahd. as. ohso `Ochs'; toch. В okso `Rind, Stier'.

References: WP. I 248 f., WH. II 815, 849, Mayrhofer 1, 98.
Pages: 1118
PIE database: PIE database
pokorny-root,pokorny-meaning,pokorny-ger_mean,pokorny-derivative,pokorny-material,pokorny-ref,pokorny-pages,pokorny-piet,

Search within this database

Select another database
Change viewing parameters
Total pages generatedPages generated by this script
1518002319459
Help
StarLing database serverPowered byCGI scripts
Copyright 1998-2003 by S. StarostinCopyright 1998-2003 by G. Bronnikov
Copyright 2005-2014 by Phil Krylov