Reconstruction:Thracian/kersas
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Thracian
[edit]Etymology
[edit](This etymology is missing or incomplete. Please add to it, or discuss it at the Etymology scriptorium.)
Related to Lithuanian kėršis, kėršas, Old Prussian kerse, kerso and Proto-Indo-European *kr̥snós: Old Church Slavonic чрьнъ (črĭnŭ), Bulgarian черен (čeren), Proto-Slavic *čьrnъ, and Sanskrit कृष्ण (kṛṣṇa).[1][2]
Noun
[edit]*kersas
Adjective
[edit]*kersas
Usage notes
[edit]- Only attested in anthroponyms: Κέρσος m (Kérsos) (Abydos, Ptolemaic ?168±138 BC)[3],[4] Κερσης m (Kersēs) (Samos), Κερζα f (Kerza) (Novo Selo, Plovdiv Province)[5] and Κερσοβλέπτης (Kersobléptēs), Κερσιβαυλος (Kersibaulos) (wiki).[1]
Derived terms
[edit]References
[edit]- ↑ 1.0 1.1 Duridanov, Ivan Vasiliev (1985) Die Sprache der Thraker [The Language of the Thracians][1] (in German), Hieronymus Verlag, →ISBN, pages 60, 78
- ^ Vladimir I. Georgiev (1977) Траките И Техният Език [The Thracians and their Language][2] (in Bulgarian), Изд-во на Българската академия на науките, page 84
- ^ Paul Perdrizet, Gustave Lefebvre (1919) Les graffites grecs du Memnonion d'Abydos, Nancy-Paris-Strasbourg: Chez Berger-Levrault, page 77, ?54
- ^ “Graffites d'Abydos 421”, in Searchable Greek Inscriptions (in Ancient Greek), https://epigraphy.packhum.org, 2007—2020
- ^ “IGGulg III, 1 1408”, in Searchable Greek Inscriptions (in Ancient Greek), https://epigraphy.packhum.org, 2007—2020