Reconstruction:Proto-Sino-Tibetan/r-paj
Proto-Sino-Tibetan
Etymology
- Proto-Sino-Tibetan: ?
- Proto-Tibeto-Burman: *r-paj (Matisoff, STEDT); *paj ⪤ *plaj (Matisoff, 1978)
In Jingpho the word for spleen is represented by compounds like kanpai, hkumpai ~ kumpai ~ gumpai, hkinpai and sinpai, in which the first element appears to be a body-part classifier and the second is the reflex of PTB *r-paj itself. In these compounds, the morpheme kan means “stomach” when it occurs in isolation, while hkum ~ kum ~ gum is a generic body-part classifier, probably from PTB *(k/g)um (“back, body”). The last compound seems to be formed by the word sin, meaning “liver”.
Particular attention must be paid to distinguish between direct cognates of this root in Sino-Tibetan languages and the borrowing from Sanskrit प्लिहन् (plihan, “spleen”) or Bengali প্লীহা (pliha, “spleen”), coming from Proto-Indo-Iranian *(s)pl̥ȷ́ʰā́ ~ (s)plīȷ́ʰā́, which is ultimately derived from Proto-Indo-European *(s)plenǵʰ- (“spleen”), that in turn gave rise to Ancient Greek σπλήν (splḗn) and English spleen, but which doesn't seem related to PTB *r-paj.
Finally, this root is similar to PTB *r-(p/b)al (“spleen”), which, apart from a phonetic resemblance, shares the same meaning with the root *r-paj.
Descendants
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**:
→ Japanese: 脾 (ひ, hi)
Korean: 비 (脾, bi)
Vietnamese: tì (脾)
- Modern Mandarin
- Beijing: 脾 (pí, /pʰi³⁵/, “spleen”)
- Cantonese: /pʰei̯²¹/
- Wu: /b̻i²³/
- Hakka: /pi¹¹/, /pʰi¹¹/
- Modern Mandarin
- Min Nan: /pʰi¹³/
- Tani
- Western Tani
- Galo: pi ko (Das Gupta, 1963)
- Western Tani
- Angami-Pochuri
- Angami
- Angami Naga: upri, /u˧.pɻi˩/
- Angami
- Sal
- Newar: अम्पि (ampi)
- Tangut-Qiang
- Northern Tangut
- Tangut: 𗮶 (*pjwɨ̱r², “spleen”)
- Northern Tangut
- Lolo-Burmese-Naxi
- Lolo-Burmese:
- *ʔ-p(r)ay¹ (Matisoff, 2003)
- Loloish
- Lolopho: /pe⁴⁴/
- Burmish
- Burmese: အဖျဉ်း (a.hpyany:)
- Lolo-Burmese:
See also
- *r-(p/b)al (“spleen”)