Reconstruction:Proto-Tungusic/murin
Appearance
Proto-Tungusic
[edit]Etymology
[edit]Possibly a loan from Proto-Mongolic *morïn, whence Mongolian морь (morʹ), Daur mori. Compare also Khitan 𘲜𘰣 (*m ri), Korean 말 (mal), Japanese 馬 (uma).
Moreover, many mainland and Southeast Asian languages have words with similar shape and semantic affinity, such as Old Chinese 馬 (OC *mraːʔ), Tibetan རྨང (rmang) and Burmese မြင်း (mrang:) in the Sino-Tibetan branch (see Proto-Sino-Tibetan *k-m-raŋ ~ s-raŋ for more) and Vietnamese ngựa, from Proto-Vietic *m-ŋəːʔ, in the Mon-Khmer branch. See also Proto-Indo-European *márkos, whence English mare and Irish marc.
Noun
[edit]*murin
Declension
[edit]Declension of *murin
Singular | |
---|---|
Nominative | *murin |
Accusative | *murinba |
Genitive | *murinŋī |
Dative | *murindua |
Locative | *murinla |
Ablative | *murindiki |
Prolative | *murinli |
Elative | *muringiʒi |
Instrumental | *murinʒi |
Delative | *murinlāki |
Directive | *murintiki |
Comitative | *muringili |
Descendants
[edit]- Northern:
- Central:
- South-Eastern:
- South-Western:
References
[edit]- Cincius, V. I. (1975) Сравнительный словарь тунгусо-маньчжурских языков [Comparative Dictionary of Tungus-Manchu Languages] (in Russian), volume 1, Leningrad: Nauka, pages 558-559
- Kane, Daniel (1989) The Sino-Jurchen Vocabulary of the Bureau of Interpreters (Uralic and Altaic Series; vol. 153), Bloomington, Indiana: Research Institute for Inner Asian Studies, Indiana University, →ISBN, page 216.
- Kane, Daniel (2009) The Kitan language and script (Handbook of Oriental Studies series, Section 8: Uralic & Central Asian Studies; 19), Leiden, Boston: Brill, page 102