пѫде
Appearance
Old Novgorodian
[edit]Alternative forms
[edit]- поуде (pude) — late form
Etymology
[edit]First attested in c. 1180‒1200. Borrowed from Old Norse pund, from Proto-Germanic *pundą, from Latin pondō. Cognate with Old East Slavic пѫдъ (pǫdŭ), Russian пуд (pud) and English pound.
Noun
[edit]пѫде • (pǫde) m
Related terms
[edit]Further reading
[edit]- Zaliznyak, Andrey (2004) Древненовгородский диалект [Old Novgorod dialect][1] (in Russian), 2nd edition, Moscow: Languages of Slavic Cultures, →ISBN, page 789
- “пѫде”, in Берестяные грамоты – Национальный корпус русского языка [Birchbark Letters – Russian National Corpus], https://ruscorpora.ru/, 2003–2024
Categories:
- Old Novgorodian terms borrowed from Old Norse
- Old Novgorodian terms derived from Old Norse
- Old Novgorodian terms derived from Proto-Germanic
- Old Novgorodian terms derived from Latin
- Old Novgorodian terms derived from Proto-Italic
- Old Novgorodian terms derived from Proto-Indo-European
- Old Novgorodian terms derived from the Proto-Indo-European root *(s)pend-
- Old Novgorodian lemmas
- Old Novgorodian nouns
- Old Novgorodian masculine nouns