Baltų-slavų-tocharų leksikos gretybės
<p><strong>ETYMOLOGICAL PARALLELS IN BALTIC, SLAVIC AND TOCHARIAN IN “NAMES OF ANIMALS AND THEIR BODY PARTS"</strong></p><p><em>Summary</em></p>In this paper words which in Tocharian name animals and their body parts are analyzed. There are 13 wo...
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Format: | Article |
Language: | deu |
Published: |
Vilnius University
2011-12-01
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Series: | Baltistica |
Subjects: | |
Online Access: | http://www.baltistica.lt/index.php/baltistica/article/view/2075 |
Summary: | <p><strong>ETYMOLOGICAL PARALLELS IN BALTIC, SLAVIC AND TOCHARIAN IN “NAMES OF ANIMALS AND THEIR BODY PARTS"</strong></p><p><em>Summary</em></p>In this paper words which in Tocharian name animals and their body parts are analyzed. There are 13 words, which have etymological parallels in Baltic, Slavic and other Indo-European languages. Five words (from 13) which name domestic animals (Toch. A <em>yuk</em>,<em> </em>В <em>yakwe</em>,<em> </em>Lith. <em>ašva</em>;<em> </em>Toch. AB <em>ku </em>“bitch, dog”, Lith. <em>šuo</em>;<em> </em>toch. A <em>ko</em>,<em> </em>B <em>ki</em>,<em> kew </em>“cow”, Latv. <em>guovs </em>“ox”; Toch. A <em>kayurs, </em>B <em>kaurse </em>“bull”, Lith. <em>veršis </em>“calf”, Toch. В <em>suwo </em>“sow”, Latv. <em>suvens </em>“pig”) have retained many of the most archaic features of the Indo-European vocabulary. The remaining eight words, which name birds, beasts, fish and insects, frequently are derivatives from Indo-European verbal or adjectivel roots. |
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ISSN: | 0132-6503 2345-0045 |