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Reconstruction talk:Proto-Indo-European/ḱomt

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Latest comment: 4 years ago by Metaknowledge in topic RFD discussion: December 2019–March 2020

Noun?

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@SpinachMaid: I haven't encountered anyone explicitly calling *ḱomt a noun within the framework of Proto-Indo-European. It could be an acrostatic neutral in Indo-Hittite if we accept the ergative theory and consider -t the neutral absolutive marker (or something else made up along these lines), but that's distinct from PIE. Mallory and Adams call -k̑m̥t- "a unit of some kind" (p. 62 in Oxford Introduction to PIE and the PIE world). Probably, it's safer to reconstruct a particle or suffix with the meaning "counting unit", not a noun? 90.194.220.234 16:20, 9 December 2019 (UTC)Reply

RFD discussion: December 2019–March 2020

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The following information has failed Wiktionary's deletion process (permalink).

It should not be re-entered without careful consideration.


Meaning contested, part of speech contested, this should be deleted. --{{victar|talk}} 15:39, 10 December 2019 (UTC)Reply

Delete, this hand derivation seems a bit far-fetched. A cool hypothesis is that a form *dḱómt-h₂ is an old collective form of *déḱm̥t, so decads like *trih₂-dḱómt-h₂ and *kʷétwr̥-dḱomt-h₂ are compound forms originally meaning three tens and four tens. – Tom 144 (𒄩𒇻𒅗𒀸) 22:54, 10 December 2019 (UTC)Reply