< Reconstruction:Proto-Indo-European
Reconstruction:Proto-Indo-European/skabʰ-
Proto-Indo-European
Derived terms
Terms derived from the Proto-Indo-European root *skabʰ- (1 c, 0 e)
- *skábʰ-e-ti (thematic present)
- *skabʰ-on-s ~ *skabʰ-en-
- Proto-Germanic: *skabô
- Old High German: schafa (“scraper”)
- Old English: scafa (“scraper”)
- Proto-Germanic: *skabô
- *skabʰ-men-s ~ *skabʰ-mn-
- ⇒ Ancient Greek: σκάμμα (skámma, “trench”)
- *skabʰ-ter-s ~ *skabʰ-tr-
- Ancient Greek: σκαπτήρ (skaptḗr, “digger”)
- *skobʰ-i-s
- Latin: scobis (“sawdust”)
- *skabʰ-ti-s
- Ancient Greek: περίσκαψις (perískapsis, “digging around”)
- Lithuanian: skàpti (“to pluck”, infinitive)
- *skabʰ-iH-s
- Latin: scabies (“roughness of the skin, scabies”)
- *skábʰ-es-s
- Ancient Greek: σκάφος (skáphos, “ditch, ship's hull”)
- *skábʰ-o-s
- Proto-Germanic: *skabaz
- Old Norse: skǫf n pl (“chips”)
- Icelandic: skaf
- Old Norse: skǫf n pl (“chips”)
- Proto-Germanic: *skabaz
- *skabʰ-ó-s
- ⇒ Lithuanian: skabùs (“sharp”)
- *skabʰ-eh₂-s
- Ancient Greek: σκάφη (skáphē, “tub, ship”)
- *skabʰ-ró-s
- Latin: scaber (“rough, scratchy, mangy”)
- (dialectal) ⇒? Lithuanian: skabrùs (“sharp”)
- Latvian: skabrs (“splintered, sharp”)
- *-skābʰ-yo-s
- Proto-Germanic: *-skōbijaz
- Old Norse: auðskæfr (“easy to smoothen”)
- Proto-Germanic: *-skōbijaz
- Unsorted formations:
- Ancient Greek: σκάπτω (skáptō, “to dig”)
- Balto-Slavic
- Lithuanian: skōbti (“to scrape, carve, pick”)
- Lithuanian: skabýti (“to cut, pick, break off”)
- (dialectal) Lithuanian: skóbas (“sour”)
- Latvian: skâbs (“sour”)
- Proto-Slavic: *skȍbľь m (“crafting or carving tool (spokeshave, chisel, gouge)”)
- Proto-Slavic: *skobľiti (“to carve, to delve”)
- Russian: ще́бень m (ščébenʹ, “crushed stone”)
References
- Rix, Helmut, editor (2001), Lexikon der indogermanischen Verben [Lexicon of Indo-European Verbs] (in German), 2nd edition, Wiesbaden: Dr. Ludwig Reichert Verlag, →ISBN, page 549
- Wodtko, Dagmar S., Irslinger, Britta, Schneider, Carolin (2008) Nomina im indogermanischen Lexikon [Nouns in the Indo-European Lexicon] (in German), Heidelberg: Universitätsverlag Winter, pages 621-22
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