Reconstruction:Proto-West Germanic/flētimā
Proto-West Germanic
Etymology
Borrowed from Vulgar Latin fletoma (“lancet, bistoury, fleam”), from Late Latin flebotomus, phlebotomus.[1]
Noun
*flētimā f
Inflection
| ōn-stem | ||
|---|---|---|
| Singular | ||
| Nominative | *flētimā | |
| Genitive | *flētimōn | |
| Singular | Plural | |
| Nominative | *flētimā | *flētimōn |
| Accusative | *flētimōn | *flētimōn |
| Genitive | *flētimōn | *flētimōnō |
| Dative | *flētimōn | *flētimōm, *flētimum |
| Instrumental | *flētimōn | *flētimōm, *flētimum |
Alternative reconstructions
- *flītimā
Descendants
- Old English: flītme, flȳtme
- Old Saxon: flietma
- Middle Low German: vlēteme, vlētem, vlētme, vlēte, vleetme, vlētene, vlētne
- Old Dutch: flietima
- Old High German: fliedima, fliodema, fliotema
References
- ^ de Vries, Jan (1971) “vlijm”, in Nederlands etymologisch woordenboek [Dutch etymological dictionary] (in Dutch), Leiden: Brill, →ISBN