π°ππΎπ°π½
Gothic
Etymology
From Proto-Germanic *arjanΔ , from Proto-Indo-European *hβΓ©ryeti. Cognate to Old English erian, Old Norse erja, and to the first element of Koine Greek αΌΟΞΏΟΟΞΉΞ¬Ο (arotriΓ‘Ε), which it translates.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /Λar.jan/
Verb
π°ππΎπ°π½ β’ (arjan)
- (hapax) to plough (to use a plough)
- 4th century C.E., Wulfila (attributed), Gothic Bible, Luke 17:7:
- ππ°π πΈπ°π½ πΉπΆπ π°ππ° ππΊπ°π»πΊ π°πΉπ²π°π½π³π π°ππΎπ°π½π³π°π½ π°πΉπΈπΈπ°πΏ π·π°π»π³π°π½π³π°π½, ππ°π΄πΉ π°ππ²π°π²π²π°π½π³πΉπ½ π°π π·π°πΉπΈπΎπ°πΉ π΅πΉπΈπ°πΉ: ππΏπ½π π·πΉπ½π³π°ππ»π΄πΉπΈ π°π½πΏπ·πΊπΏπΌπ±π΄πΉ?
- Ζas ΓΎan izwara skalk aigands arjandan aiΓΎΓΎau haldandan, saei atgaggandin af haiΓΎjai qiΓΎai: suns hindarleiΓΎ anuhkumbei?
- But which of you, having a servant plowing or feeding cattle, will say unto him by and by, when he is come from the field, Go and sit down to meat? (KJV)
- 4th century C.E., Wulfila (attributed), Gothic Bible, Luke 17:7:
Conjugation
Only attested in the accusative singular of the present participle: π°ππΎπ°π½π³π°π½ (arjandan), which is not enough to determine the conjugation. In Old High German, it is a class 7 strong verb, but in all other Germanic languages, it is class 1 weak, while the root's phonological shape could also suggest class 6 strong.
See also
- π·ππ·π° (hΕha, βploughβ)
Further reading
- Lehmann, Winfred P. (1986) βA195. *arjanβ, in A Gothic Etymological Dictionary, based on the 3rd ed. of Feistβs dictionary, Leiden: E. J. Brill, page 42
- Streitberg, Wilhelm (1910). Die gotische Bibel. Zweiter Teil: Gotisch-griechisch-deutsches WΓΆrterbuch. Heidelberg: Carl Winterβs UniversitΓ€tsbuchhandlung, p. 12
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