< Reconstruction:Proto-Brythonic
Reconstruction:Proto-Brythonic/Uɨsk
Proto-Brythonic
Etymology
From Proto-Celtic *ɸēskos (“fish”), from Proto-Indo-European *peysk-. This inherited term was supplanted as the generic word for "fish" by *pɨsk, a borrowing from Latin piscis, but survives as a fossilized term in a number of toponyms.
Descendants
Derived terms
References
- Witcombe, Richard (2009). Who was Aveline anyway?: Mendip's Cave Names Explained (2nd ed.). Priddy: Wessex Cave Club.
- Eilert Ekwall (1981). The Concise Oxford Dictionary of English Place-names. Oxford [Eng.]: OUP. p. 171.
- Owen, H.W. & Morgan, R. 2007 Dictionary of the Place-names of Wales Gomer Press, Ceredigion; Gwasg Gomer / Gomer Press; page 484.
- Joseph Bosworth and T. Northcote Toller (1898) “Ex”, in An Anglo-Saxon Dictionary, 2nd edition, Oxford: Oxford University Press.
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