< Reconstruction:Proto-Kartvelian

Reconstruction:Proto-Kartvelian/ḳwer-

This Proto-Kartvelian entry contains reconstructed terms and roots. As such, the term(s) in this entry are not directly attested, but are hypothesized to have existed based on comparative evidence.

Proto-Kartvelian

Etymology

Onomatopoeic.

Noun

*ḳwer-

  1. crow

Reconstruction notes

Uncertain; Svan descendant is variously glossed as crow or stork. Technically it could rather be a descendant of Proto-Kartvelian *c̣₁ero- instead.}}

Affrication of word-initial *ḳ is regular for Svan, compare: ჭაშ (č̣aš, husband)Proto-Kartvelian *ḳac₁- (male), ჭიშხ (č̣išx)Proto-Kartvelian *ḳurc₁x- (foot).

Descendants

  • Proto-Georgian-Zan:
  • >? Svan: ჭო̈̄რ (č̣ȫr, crow; stork (Ciconia spp.)), ჭუ̂ე̄რ (č̣ûēr), ჭუ̂ერ (č̣ûer), ჭერ (č̣er)

References

  • Klimov, G. A. (1998) Etymological Dictionary of the Kartvelian Languages (Trends in linguistics. Documentation; 16), New York, Berlin: Mouton de Gruyter, page 93
  • Čuxua, Merab (2009) “Damaṭebiti masalebi saertokartveluri puʒe-enis leksiḳuri pondisatvis [The Additional Materials for the Commonkartvelian Proto-language Lexical Fund]”, in Kartvelur enata sṭrukṭuris saḳitxebi (in Georgian), number 10, Tbilisi: Universali, page 229 of 227–250, connects with Georgian კვირიონი (ḳvirioni, European bee-eater (Merops apiaster)), which is unlikely to be unrelated due to the difference in meanings
  • Ḳelauraʒe, Levan (2020) “Damaṭebani kartvelur enata eṭimologiuri leksiḳonisatvis - VII [Addenda to Etymological Dictionary of Kartvelian Languages - VII]”, in Eṭimologiuri ʒiebani (in Georgian), volume XVII, Tbilisi: Dedaena, page 26 of 23–33

Further reading

  • Čikobava, Arnold (1938) Č̣anur-megrul-kartuli šedarebiti leksiḳoni [Laz–Megrel–Georgian Comparative Dictionary] (Works; IV) (in Georgian), Tbilisi: Arnold Chikobava Institute of Linguistics, published 2008, page 121
  • Klimov, G. A. (1964) “*q̇wa-”, in Этимологический словарь картвельских языков [Etymological Dictionary of the Kartvelian Languages] (in Russian), Moscow: Academy Press, pages 209–210
This article is issued from Wiktionary. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.