π½π°πΏπ΄π»
Gothic
Etymology
Borrowed from Ancient Greek ΞαΏΆΞ΅ (NΓ΄e), with added -l- likely by analogy with Hebrew names such as Daniel ending in ΧΦ΅Χ (el, βgodβ), from Biblical Hebrew Χ ΦΉΧΦ· (NΕaαΈ₯).
Declension
Accusative and dative singular unattested, but compare similar loaned names such as π°π±ππ°π·π°πΌ (abraham).
Loanword; irregular/mixed declension | ||
---|---|---|
Singular | Plural | |
Nominative | π½π°πΏπ΄π» nauΔl |
β |
Vocative | β | β |
Accusative | *π½π°πΏπ΄π» *nauΔl |
β |
Genitive | π½π°πΏπ΄π»πΉπ nauΔlis |
β |
Dative | *π½π°πΏπ΄π»π° *nauΔla |
β |
Descendants
- β Latin: Noel (hapax from the earliest inscriptions found at Notre-Dame de la Daurade at Toulouse, likely dating from the Visigothic period and influenced by this Wulfilan Gothic form.)
References
- Carla Falluomini, "Traces of Wulfila's Bible Translation in Visigothic Gaul", Amsterdamer BeitrΓ€ge zur Γ€lteren Germanistik 80 (2020) pp. 5-24.
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