3,274,277
edits
mNo edit summary |
|||
Line 32: | Line 32: | ||
}} | }} | ||
{{etym | {{etym | ||
|etymtx=1<br />Meaning: [[hiccup]]<br />See also: s. [[λύζω]].<br />2 [[λυγκός]] (<b class="b3">-γγός</b>)<br />Grammatical information: m. f.<br />Meaning: [[lynx]] (h. Hom. 19, 24, E., Arist., Thphr., Ael.).<br />Other forms: [[λυγγός]] E. fr. 683.<br />Compounds: As 1. member in <b class="b3">λυκό-λυγξ</b> [[wolflynx]] (pap. in Sb. Heidelb. 1923: 2, 14, 13); [[λυγγούριον]] (<b class="b3">λυγκ-</b>, <b class="b3">λιγκ-</b> u. a.) n. kind of amber (Thphr., Delos IIIa), s. v.<br />Derivatives: [[λυγκίον]] dimin. (Callix.), [[λύγγιος]] [[of the lynx]] (Edict. Diocl.). On ambivalent PN [[Λυγκεύς]] (Hdt., Pi.) s. Boßhardt 130f.; from there [[λυγκεύς]] as name of an eye-salve (medic.).<br />Origin: LW [a loanword which is (probably) not of Pre-Greek origin] Eur. substr.<br />Etymology: Old name of the lynx, found also in Armenian, German and Balto-Slavic. Except for the nasal [[λύγξ]] has a counterpart in Lith. consonant stem | |etymtx=1<br />Meaning: [[hiccup]]<br />See also: s. [[λύζω]].<br />2 [[λυγκός]] (<b class="b3">-γγός</b>)<br />Grammatical information: m. f.<br />Meaning: [[lynx]] (h. Hom. 19, 24, E., Arist., Thphr., Ael.).<br />Other forms: [[λυγγός]] E. fr. 683.<br />Compounds: As 1. member in <b class="b3">λυκό-λυγξ</b> [[wolflynx]] (pap. in Sb. Heidelb. 1923: 2, 14, 13); [[λυγγούριον]] (<b class="b3">λυγκ-</b>, <b class="b3">λιγκ-</b> u. a.) n. kind of amber (Thphr., Delos IIIa), s. v.<br />Derivatives: [[λυγκίον]] dimin. (Callix.), [[λύγγιος]] [[of the lynx]] (Edict. Diocl.). On ambivalent PN [[Λυγκεύς]] (Hdt., Pi.) s. Boßhardt 130f.; from there [[λυγκεύς]] as name of an eye-salve (medic.).<br />Origin: LW [a loanword which is (probably) not of Pre-Greek origin] Eur. substr.<br />Etymology: Old name of the lynx, found also in Armenian, German and Balto-Slavic. Except for the nasal [[λύγξ]] has a counterpart in Lith. consonant stem [[lūš-ų]] (gen. pl.), with as innovation the [[i-]]stem <b class="b2">lū́š-is</b>. The same transformation show the Slav. words, which however through influence of an other word (<b class="b2">*rysъ</b> [[sotted]], [[red]]?) got an initial [[r-]]: Russ. [[rýsь]] etc. Also elsewhere transformstions have occurred: with thematic vowel in Swed. [[lō]] [[lynx]] (PGm. <b class="b2">*luh-a-</b>, IE <b class="b2">*luḱ-o-</b>); with [[s-]]sufflx in Westgermanic: OHG [[luhs]], OE [[lox]] (cf. Germ. [[Fuchs]], OE [[fox]]); with [[n-]]suffix in Arm. <b class="b2">lus-an-un-k`</b> ([[ἅπ]]. [[εἰρ]].) pl., which also supposes old full grade (IE <b class="b2">*leuḱ-</b> or [[louḱ-]]). The Arm. [[n-]]fomation might be connected somehow with the Greek nasalinfix, which reappers also in Lith. dial. (Zem.) [[lųnšis]]. - Details and further connections in Bq, WP. 2, 411 f., Pok. 690, Fraenkel Wb. s. <b class="b2">lū́šis</b>, Vasmer Wb. s. [[rýsь]]. - Fur. 121 adduces considerations that show that it is in origin a non-IE word. The word has been connected with the root <b class="b2">*leuḱ-</b> [[see]] and would refer to the sharp sight of the animal. But this cannot explain the long [[u]] of Balto-Slavic. Nor can the [[-n-]] be explained; nor the [[g]] of Gr. <b class="b3">λύγγ-ιος</b>. So the word is non-IE, prob. a loan from a Eur. substratum. - I see no reason to connect the gloss <b class="b3">λουνόν λαμπρόν</b> H. The PN [[Λυγκεύς]] may be cognate or not. S. also [[λυγγούριον]]. | ||
}} | }} | ||
{{mdlsj | {{mdlsj |