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This Proto-Germanic entry contains reconstructed terms and roots. As such, the term(s) in this entry are not directly attested, but are hypothesized to have existed based on comparative evidence.
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Proto-Germanic
Etymology
From *lekaną (“to leak, drain”), from Proto-Indo-European *leg- (“to leak”).
Pronunciation
Noun
*lakō f
- leak; drain; ditch
- seep; water aggregation, puddle, pool; lake
Inflection
Declension of *lakō (ō-stem)
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singular
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plural
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| nominative
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*lakō
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*lakôz
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| vocative
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*lakō
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*lakôz
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| accusative
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*lakǭ
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*lakōz
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| genitive
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*lakōz
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*lakǫ̂
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| dative
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*lakōi
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*lakōmaz
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| instrumental
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*lakō
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*lakōmiz
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Derived terms
- Proto-West Germanic: *laku
- Old English: lacu
- Old Frisian: *lake
- >? Saterland Frisian: Loge (“brine”) (perhaps merged with descendant of Proto-West Germanic *lagu)
- Old Saxon: laca (in placenames)
- Old Dutch: *laka
- Middle Dutch: lāke
- Dutch: laak, laoke (dialectal)
- Old High German: lacha, *lahha
- Middle High German: lache
- → Vulgar Latin: *lacca
- Italian: lacca
- >? Old Occitan: lac, laz, latz (“pit, trench, pitfall”) (merged with descendant of Latin laqueus (“knot, noose, snare, trap”))
- → Old Church Slavonic: локꙑ (loky)