Reconstruction:Gothic/π±ππΏπΆπ³ππ½
Appearance
Gothic
[edit]Etymology
[edit]From Proto-Germanic *bruzdΕnΔ (βto prick, embroiderβ), from Proto-Indo-European *bΚ°rΜ₯s-dΚ°- (βto prickβ). Cognate with Old Saxon brordΕn, Old High German brortΕn (βto embroider, decorateβ).
Verb
[edit]*π±ππΏπΆπ³ππ½ β’ (*bruzdΕn)
- to embroider
Conjugation
[edit]Descendants
[edit]- β Vulgar Latin: *brustΕ
- Old French: brosder, broisder, brouder
- Middle French: broder; embroder
- Norman: broder (Jersey), broudaΓ―r (GuernΓ©siais)
- Picard: border
- Old French: embrosder, embrouder
- β Middle English: broiden, brouden
- β Middle English: embrouderen, embrowderen, embroderen
- Iberian:
- Old Italian: brustare
- Old Occitan: broidar, brodar
- Old French: brosder, broisder, brouder
Categories:
- Gothic terms derived from Proto-Indo-European
- Gothic terms derived from the Proto-Indo-European root *bΚ°ers-
- Gothic terms inherited from Proto-Germanic
- Gothic terms derived from Proto-Germanic
- Gothic lemmas
- Gothic verbs
- Gothic class 2 weak verbs
- Gothic entries with inflection not matching pagename
- Gothic reconstructed verbs