Reconstruction:Proto-Germanic/-aną
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Proto-Germanic
[edit]Etymology
[edit]From Proto-Indo-European *-onom, from *-o- (thematic vowel) + *-nom (verbal noun suffix). The few remaining athematic verbs (which were irregular in Proto-Germanic) accordingly used only *-ną. Cognate with Sanskrit -अन (-ana).
Pronunciation
[edit]Verb
[edit]*-aną
- The infinitive suffix of strong verbs.
Usage notes
[edit]This suffix was not productive in Proto-Germanic.
Inflection
[edit]Strong verbs consist of four principal parts: the present stem (1), the past singular stem (2), the general past stem (3) and the past participle (4). The seven classes of strong verb differ only in how their principal parts are formed.
Conjugation of *1-aną (strong)
Derived terms
[edit]Descendants
[edit]- Old English: -an
- Old Frisian: -a
- Old Saxon: -an
- Old Dutch: -an
- Old High German: -an
- Old Norse: -a
- Gothic: -𐌰𐌽 (-an)
References
[edit]- Fulk, R.D. (2018). A Comparative Grammar of the Early Germanic Languages. Amsterdam/Philadelphia: John Benjamins, pp. 252–253; 284–285.