< Reconstruction:Proto-Sino-Tibetan < m < s
Reconstruction:Proto-Sino-Tibetan/m/s/g-ljak
Proto-Sino-Tibetan
Etymology
- Proto-Sino-Tibetan: *liek (Coblin, 1986)
- Proto-Tibeto-Burman: *m-lyak ⪤ *s-lyak ⪤ *g-lyak (Matisoff, STEDT); *(m-)lyak ~ (s-)lyak (Benedict, 1972; Weidert, 1987; Coblin, 1986); *m-lyak ⪤ *s-lyak (LaPolla, 1987; Michailovsky, 1991)
Other cognate roots in STEDT:
- *m/s-laj ~ s-lej (“tongue”)
- *s-l(j)a (“tongue”)
- *s-ljam (“tongue, flame”)
- *s-ljaːw (“to lick, tongue”)
The words for "to lick" and "tongue" in many languages have similar shapes, compare:
- Indo-European
- Proto-Indo-European: *dn̥ǵʰwéh₂s (“tongue”) (English tongue, Latin lingua; the change *dn̥- to l- occured in three branches: Lithuanian, Armenian, Latin)
- Proto-Indo-European: *leyǵʰ- (“to lick”) (English lick, Latin lingō)
- Hmong-Mien
- Proto-Hmong-Mien: *mblet (“tongue”) (Hmong RPA nplaig)
- Tai-Kadai
- Austroasiatic:
- Austronesian:
- Proto-Malayo-Polynesian: *dilaq (“tongue”) (Malay lidah)
- Malay: jilat/dilat ("to lick")
- Afroasiatic: *lis- ("tongue"), *lVḳ- ("to lick")
- Kartvelian:
- Proto-Kartvelian *loḳ- (“to lick”) (Georgian: ლოკვა (loḳva, “to lick”))
Descendants
Descendants listed hereafter are mainly for words with the sense "to lick" only. Words with the sense "tongue" in daughter languages are mostly cognate to these and can be found at *m/s-laj ~ s-lej.
- Old Chinese:
5=sikPlease see Module:checkparams for help with this warning.
**:
→ Japanese: 食 (しょく, shoku)
Korean: 식 (食, sik)
Vietnamese: thực (食)
See also
- *dz(j)a-k/n/t/s (“to eat”)
This article is issued from Wiktionary. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.