πƒπŒ°πŒ±πŒ±πŒ°π„π‰

Gothic

Alternative forms

  • *πƒπŒ°πŒΌπŒ±πŒ°π„π‰ (*sambatō) β€” possibly dialectal

Etymology

Borrowed from Koine Greek σάββατον (sΓ‘bbaton), from Hebrew Χ©Χ‘Χͺ.

Noun

πƒπŒ°πŒ±πŒ±πŒ°π„π‰ β€’ (sabbatō) m

  1. (Christianity) Saturday, the Sabbath day

Inflection

This noun is usually indeclinable, but some inflected forms have been attested: πƒπŒ°πŒ±πŒ±πŒ°π„πŒ°πŒΏπƒ (sabbataus) (gen. sg.), πƒπŒ°πŒ±πŒ±πŒ°π„πŒ΄ (sabbatΔ“) (gen. pl.), πƒπŒ°πŒ±πŒ±πŒ°π„πŒΉπŒΌ (sabbatim) and πƒπŒ°πŒ±πŒ±πŒ°π„πŒΏπŒΌ (sabbatum) (both dat pl.).

Derived terms

Descendants

  • β†’ Old High German: sambaztag, samiztag (from *πƒπŒ°πŒΌπŒ±πŒ°π„π‰ (*sambatō))
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