houm
Appearance
Old English
[edit]Pronunciation
[edit]Noun
[edit]hōum
Pacoh
[edit]Alternative forms
[edit]- (Pahi Tamprin, Kadô) hom
Etymology
[edit]From Proto-Katuic *hoom, from Proto-Mon-Khmer. Cognate with Bahnar hum, Khasi sum, Muak Sa-aak sum³, Mal ʔəm, Mon ဟုံ, Sa'och huːm, Tho [Cuối Chăm] ʔʌm¹, Vietnamese tắm, Santali ᱩᱢ (um).
Katuic, Bahnaric, Mon, Pearic have *h- for this word; Khasian, Palaungic, some Vietic (including Viet-Muong) point to *s-; Munda, Khmuic and the rest of Vietic point to zero consonant. See also palhôm (“pulse, habit”), caheip (“centipede”), aham (“blood”) for some more cases of difficult-to-interpret variations within Austroasiatic branches.
Pronunciation
[edit]Verb
[edit]houm
- (Tal-ay dialect) to bathe
Categories:
- Old English terms with IPA pronunciation
- Old English non-lemma forms
- Old English noun forms
- Pacoh terms inherited from Proto-Katuic
- Pacoh terms derived from Proto-Katuic
- Pacoh terms inherited from Proto-Mon-Khmer
- Pacoh terms derived from Proto-Mon-Khmer
- Pacoh terms with IPA pronunciation
- Pacoh lemmas
- Pacoh verbs