ππ°πΏπΉπ»
Gothic
Etymology
Ultimately from Proto-Indo-European *sΓ³hβwlΜ₯, and cognate to Old English sΕl and Old Norse sΓ³l f, though reconstructing a Proto-Germanic form of this etymon is difficult; it may possibly have been a consonant stem Proto-Germanic *sΕel (from an earlier *sΕwel with unexpected full-grade, whence the Gothic form) or Proto-Germanic *sΕl (from an earlier *sΕwul with zero-grade, whence the Old English (remodeled as an a-stem) and Old Norse form (remodeled as an feminine Ε-stem); one can see Ringe 2017 and Kroonen 2011 and 2013 for details. In the Indo-European root lies also the origin of ππΏπ½π½π (sunnΕ), as well as Koine Greek αΌ₯Ξ»ΞΉΞΏΟ (hαΈlios), which both of the Gothic terms translate.
The term was an l-/n-stem in Proto-Indo-European, and Kroonen (2013) considers it likely that the Gothic term was too, as well as the Proto-Germanic form (which he reconstructs as a neuter heteroclitic stem *sΕel), thus viewing the dative form ππΏπ½π½πΉπ½ (sunnin) as the regular dative form of the present lemma as part of a declension similar to the one of πππ½ (fΕn). Otherwise, ππΏπ½π½πΉπ½ (sunnin) (attested twice in Mark) has generally been seen as a dative form of a neuter an-stem whose nominative form would be identical to the nominative of ππΏπ½π½π f (sunnΕ) (see e. g. Kroonen 2011, Lehmann 1986, Streitberg s. 132, and especially Ringe 2017 with ref.).
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /ΛsΙΛ.il/
Proper noun
ππ°πΏπΉπ» β’ (sauil) n
- the Sun (star)
- Synonym: ππΏπ½π½π f (sunnΕ)
- 4th Century, Wulfila (tr.), Gothic Bible: Gospel of Mark (Codex Argenteus) 1.32:[1]
- π°π½π³π°π½π°π·ππΎπ° πΈπ°π½ π
π°πΏππΈπ°π½π°πΌπΌπ°, πΈπ°π½ π²π°ππ°π²π²π΅ ππ°πΏπΉπ», π±π΄ππΏπ½ π³πΏ πΉπΌπΌπ° π°π»π»π°π½π πΈπ°π½π πΏπ±πΉπ» π·π°π±π°π½π³π°π½π πΎπ°π· πΏπ½π·πΏπ»πΈππ½π π·π°π±π°π½π³π°π½π.
- andanahtja ΓΎan waurΓΎanamma, ΓΎan gasaggq sauil, bΔrun du imma allans ΓΎans ubil habandans jah unhulΓΎΕns habandans.
- And at even, when the sun did set, they brought unto him all that were diseased, and them that were possessed with devils. (KJV).
- π°π½π³π°π½π°π·ππΎπ° πΈπ°π½ π
π°πΏππΈπ°π½π°πΌπΌπ°, πΈπ°π½ π²π°ππ°π²π²π΅ ππ°πΏπΉπ», π±π΄ππΏπ½ π³πΏ πΉπΌπΌπ° π°π»π»π°π½π πΈπ°π½π πΏπ±πΉπ» π·π°π±π°π½π³π°π½π πΎπ°π· πΏπ½π·πΏπ»πΈππ½π π·π°π±π°π½π³π°π½π.
- 4th Century, Wulfila (tr.), Gothic Bible: Gospel of Mark (Codex Argenteus) 13.24:[2]
- π°πΊπ΄πΉ πΉπ½ πΎπ°πΉπ½π°π½π π³π°π²π°π½π π°ππ°π πΈπ π°π²π»ππ½ πΎπ°πΉπ½π° ππ°πΏπΉπ» ππΉπ΅πΉπΆπ΄πΉπΈ πΎπ°π· πΌπ΄π½π° π½πΉ π²πΉπ±πΉπΈ π»πΉπΏπ·π°πΈ ππ΄πΉπ½.
- akei in jainans dagans afar ΓΎΕ aglΕn jaina sauil riqizeiΓΎ jah mΔna ni gibiΓΎ liuhaΓΎ sein.
- But in those days, after that tribulation, the sun shall be darkened, and the moon shall not give her light, (KJV).
- π°πΊπ΄πΉ πΉπ½ πΎπ°πΉπ½π°π½π π³π°π²π°π½π π°ππ°π πΈπ π°π²π»ππ½ πΎπ°πΉπ½π° ππ°πΏπΉπ» ππΉπ΅πΉπΆπ΄πΉπΈ πΎπ°π· πΌπ΄π½π° π½πΉ π²πΉπ±πΉπΈ π»πΉπΏπ·π°πΈ ππ΄πΉπ½.
Usage notes
This word for "Sun" is only used in Mark; in Nehemiah, Matthew, Luke and Ephesians is the apparent synonym ππΏπ½π½π f (sunnΕ) used.
Declension
The dative form may have been ππΏπ½π½πΉπ½ (sunnin), which also appears only in Mark; see the etymology section.
Coordinate terms
- π°πΏπΆπ°π½π³πΉπ» (auzandil, βthe morning starβ)
- πΌπ΄π½π° (mΔna, βthe Moonβ)
- πππ°πΉππ½π (stairnΕ, βstarβ)
See also
- πΏπππΉπ½π½π°π½ (urrinnan, βcome forth, riseβ)
- ππΉπ²π΅π°π½ (sigqan, βsink, setβ)
- ππΏπ²π²π» (tuggl)
References
- Mark chapter 1 Provided by Project Wulfila 2004, University of Antwerp, Belgium. Last modified on 2005-03-30 by TDH.
- Mark chapter 13 Provided by Project Wulfila 2004, University of Antwerp, Belgium. Last modified on 2005-03-30 by TDH.
- Kroonen, Guus (2011) The Proto-Germanic n-stems: A study in diachronic morphophonology, Amsterdam, New York: Rodopi, βISBN, page 323
- Kroonen, Guus (2013) β*sΕel- ~ *sunnΕn-β, in Etymological Dictionary of Proto-Germanic (Leiden Indo-European Etymological Dictionary Series; 11), Leiden, Boston: Brill, βISBN, pages 463β464: βThe heteroclisy was preserved by Germanic, and probably remained intact even in Gothic, cf. nom. sauil, dat. sunnin.β
- Streitberg, Wilhelm (1910). Die gotische Bibel. Zweiter Teil: Gotisch-griechisch-deutsches WΓΆrterbuch. Heidelberg: Carl Winterβs UniversitΓ€tsbuchhandlung, p. 132
- Ringe, Donald (2017) From Proto-Indo-European to Proto-Germanic (A Linguistic History of English; 1). Second Edition. Oxford: Oxford University Press, p. 309β10: " [β¦] the ON noun: PIE *sΓ³hβwlΜ₯ > *sΕwul > PGmc *sΕΜl (?; see 3.2.6 (i) ) >β *sΕlΕ (fem., see below) > ON sΓ³l. The Gothic neuter noun sauil, attested twice, seems to show leveling of the oblique suffix ablaut *-e- into the direct form in *-l, though the details are hard to recover. But all the Gmc languages also attest an n-stem noun *sunnΕn- [β¦] feminine, evidently because 'moon' is masculine [β¦] , though a neuter dat. sg. sunnin attested twice in Gothic suggests that this word too was originally neuter (cf. Braune and Ebbinghaus 1973:73 with references)."
Further reading
- Lehmann, Winfred P. (1986) βS164. sunnoβ, in A Gothic Etymological Dictionary, based on the 3rd ed. of Feistβs dictionary, Leiden: E. J. Brill, page 330
- Streitberg, Wilhelm (1910). Die gotische Bibel. Zweiter Teil: Gotisch-griechisch-deutsches WΓΆrterbuch. Heidelberg: Carl Winterβs UniversitΓ€tsbuchhandlung, p. 118