< Reconstruction:Proto-Germanic
Reconstruction:Proto-Germanic/bakārijaz
Proto-Germanic
Etymology
From *bakiz (“baking; batch”) + *-ārijaz.
Noun
*bakārijaz m
- One who creates baked goods; baker
Inflection
masculine a-stemDeclension of *bakārijaz (masculine a-stem) | |||
---|---|---|---|
singular | plural | ||
nominative | *bakārijaz | *bakārijōz, *bakārijōs | |
vocative | *bakārī | *bakārijōz, *bakārijōs | |
accusative | *bakāriją | *bakārijanz | |
genitive | *bakārijas, *bakārīs | *bakārijǫ̂ | |
dative | *bakārijai | *bakārijamaz | |
instrumental | *bakārijō | *bakārijamiz |
Descendants
- Old English: bæcere
- Middle English: bakere, backer, backere
- English: baker
- Scots: bakar, baikar
- Middle English: bakere, backer, backere
- Old Frisian: *bakere, *bekere
- Saterland Frisian: Bakker
- West Frisian: bakker
- Old Saxon: bakkāri, bakkeri, bekkeri, bekkere
- Middle Low German: backære, backer, beckere, becker
- German Low German: Backer
- Plautdietsch: Bakja
- Middle Low German: backære, backer, beckere, becker
- Old Dutch: *bakkari
- Middle Dutch: backere
- Dutch: bakker
- Afrikaans: bakker
- → Sranan Tongo: bakri
- Limburgish: bekker
- Dutch: bakker
- Middle Dutch: backere
- Old High German: bekkāri, beckāri
- Middle High German: beckære, becker
- German: Bäcker
- Middle High German: beckære, becker
- Old Norse: bakari
- Icelandic: bakari
- Faroese: bakari
- Norwegian:
- Bokmål: baker
- Nynorsk: bakar
- Old Swedish: bakare, baghare (late)
- Swedish: bagare
- Danish: bager
- Gutnish: bakare, bagare
- → Estonian: pagar ?