Reconstruction:Proto-Germanic/kōkô
Proto-Germanic
Etymology
Traditionally derived from Proto-Indo-European *gag- ~ *gōg- (“round, ball-shaped object; lump; clump”), but this reconstruction is obsolete in view of modern laryngeal theory as well as semantically gratuitous. Proto-Indo-European *geh₂g- or similar is possible, with the zero grade seen in the synonym *kakǭ,[1] but external cognates are unknown. Possibly a sound-symbolic invention.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /ˈkɔː.kɔːː/
Noun
*kōkô m
Inflection
| singular | plural | |
|---|---|---|
| nominative | *kōkô | *kōkaniz |
| vocative | *kōkô | *kōkaniz |
| accusative | *kōkanų | *kōkanunz |
| genitive | *kōkiniz | *kōkanǫ̂ |
| dative | *kōkini | *kōkammaz |
| instrumental | *kōkinē | *kōkammiz |
Derived terms
Related terms
Descendants
- Old English: *cōca
- Old Frisian: *kōka
- Old Saxon: *kōko, *koko
- Old Dutch: *kuoko
- Old High German: kuohho, kuocho, chuohho, chuocho, khuohho, khuocho — Upper German, Alemannic, Bavarian
- Middle High German: kuoche
- Alemannic German: Chueche
- Bavarian: Kuacha, Kuachn
- Central Franconian:
- Eiflerisch: Kooche
- Hunsrik: Kughe
- Luxembourgish: Kuch
- East Central German:
- Erzgebirgisch: Kugn
- Meißnisch: Kuchn
- Osterländisch: Guchn
- Vilamovian: kücha
- East Franconian:
- Lower East Franconian: Kuache, Kuachn
- Southern East Franconian: Kuacha
- Upper East Franconian: Kuchn, Kougn
- German: Kuchen
- Rhine Franconian: Kuche
- Frankfurterisch: [kʰuxə]
- Lorraine Franconian: Küeche
- Pennsylvania German: Kuche
- Yiddish: קוכן (kukhn)
- Middle High German: kuoche
- Old Norse: *kóki
- Norwegian: kok (dialectal)
References
- ^ Kroonen, Guus (2013) “*kōkan-”, in Etymological Dictionary of Proto-Germanic (Leiden Indo-European Etymological Dictionary Series; 11)[1], Leiden, Boston: Brill, →ISBN, page 299