Reconstruction:Proto-West Germanic/dūnā
Proto-West Germanic
Alternative forms
- *dūn m, *dūnu f, *dūnō m
Etymology
Uncertain and disputed; possibly from Proto-Germanic *dūnaz (“accumulation, pile, heap, mound”) (whence also Old Norse dúnn (“pile, heap, assembly”)), from Proto-Germanic base *dū- (“to whisk, whip up, excite, agitate, storm, be stormy”), from Proto-Indo-European *dʰewh₂- (“smoke, dust, haze”). Unlike permanent hills, sand dunes are ever-shifting due to storms and wind, and are not optimal places to build fortifications.
Alternatively, perhaps borrowed from Proto-Celtic *dūnom (“stronghold, rampart”), from the same Proto-Indo-European root above, which also developed the sense of "hill, fortified hill" in Brythonic; however phonology makes a borrowing from Brythonic untenable, as the vowel there shifted from ū to i giving Proto-Brythonic *din where Germanic still clearly has ū.
Inflection
ōn-stem | ||
---|---|---|
Singular | ||
Nominative | *dūnā | |
Genitive | *dūnōn | |
Singular | Plural | |
Nominative | *dūnā | *dūnōn |
Accusative | *dūnōn | *dūnōn |
Genitive | *dūnōn | *dūnōnō |
Dative | *dūnōn | *dūnōm, *dūnum |
Instrumental | *dūnōn | *dūnōm, *dūnum |