sviger-
See also: sviger
Danish
Etymology
Borrowed from German schwieger- (“-in-law”), extracted from Schwiegermutter (“mother-in-law”), older Schwieger, from Proto-Germanic *swegrō, cognate with Old English sweġer. The word goes back to Proto-Indo-European *sweḱrúh₂ (“mother-in-law”), hence Latin socrus), Ancient Greek ἑκύρα (hekúra), Sanskrit श्वश्रूः (śvaśrū́ḥ). It is further related to *swéḱuros (“father-in-law”) (German Schwäher, Latin socer) and Proto-Indo-European *swēḱurós (“husband's brother”) (German Schwager, hence Danish svoger).
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /sviːˀər-/, [ˈsʋ̥iˀɐ-]
Derived terms
Danish terms prefixed with sviger-
Related terms
Norwegian Bokmål
Etymology
From German schwieger-.
Norwegian Nynorsk
Etymology
From German schwieger-.
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