< Reconstruction:Proto-Germanic
Reconstruction:Proto-Germanic/diuriþō
Proto-Germanic
Etymology
From *diurijaz + *-iþō.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /ˈdiu̯.ri.θɔː/
Noun
*diuriþō f
- dearness, costliness, preciousness
- glory, honour
Inflection
ō-stemDeclension of *diuriþō (ō-stem) | |||
---|---|---|---|
singular | plural | ||
nominative | *diuriþō | *diuriþôz | |
vocative | *diuriþō | *diuriþôz | |
accusative | *diuriþǭ | *diuriþōz | |
genitive | *diuriþōz | *diuriþǫ̂ | |
dative | *diuriþōi | *diuriþōmaz | |
instrumental | *diuriþō | *diuriþōmiz |
Descendants
- Old English: *dīerþu, *dīerþ
- Middle English: derth, derthe, derþ, derþe, dierþe, dyrthe
- English: dearth
- Scots: dearth, darth, deart, daart
- Middle English: derth, derthe, derþ, derþe, dierþe, dyrthe
- Old Frisian: *diōrithe, *diōrthe
- Saterland Frisian: Djuurte
- West Frisian: djoerte
- Old Saxon: diuritha
- Middle Low German: dǖrede, dûrete, dûrte
- German Low German: Düürte
- Middle Low German: dǖrede, dûrete, dûrte
- Old Dutch: *diuritha
- Middle Dutch: *dierede, *durede, *dierde, *duurde, dierte, duurte
- Dutch: duurte
- Afrikaans: duurte
- Dutch: duurte
- Middle Dutch: *dierede, *durede, *dierde, *duurde, dierte, duurte
- Old High German: tiurida
- Middle High German: tiurede, tiurde, tūrde
- Old Norse: dýrð
- Icelandic: dýrð
- Faroese: dýrd
- Swedish: dyrd
- Old Gutnish: dyrþ