< Reconstruction:Proto-Germanic
Reconstruction:Proto-Germanic/knuttô
Proto-Germanic
Etymology
Possibly from Proto-Indo-European *gnod- (“to bind”). Cognate with Latin nōdus.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /ˈknut.tɔːː/
Noun
*knuttô m
- a knot
Inflection
masculine an-stemDeclension of *knuttô (masculine an-stem) | |||
---|---|---|---|
singular | plural | ||
nominative | *knuttô | *knuttaniz | |
vocative | *knuttô | *knuttaniz | |
accusative | *knuttanų | *knuttanunz | |
genitive | *knuttiniz | *knuttanǫ̂ | |
dative | *knuttini | *knuttammaz | |
instrumental | *knuttinē | *knuttammiz |
Derived terms
- *knuttijaną
Descendants
- Proto-West Germanic: *knottō
- Old English: cnotta
- Middle English: knotte, knote, knott, knot, cnotte, cnot, notte
- English: knot
- Scots: knot
- Middle English: knotte, knote, knott, knot, cnotte, cnot, notte
- Old Frisian: knotta
- Saterland Frisian: Knöt, Knät
- West Frisian: knotte
- Old Saxon: knotto
- Middle Low German: knotte, knutte
- German Low German: Knütt, Knütte
- Middle Low German: knotte, knutte
- Old Dutch: *knotto
- Middle Dutch: cnote, cnotte, cnudde
- Dutch: knot
- Middle Dutch: cnote, cnotte, cnudde
- Old High German: *knozzo; *knozza f
- Middle High German: knotze f
- German: Knotze f (“gnarl, knot”) (obsolete)
- Middle High German: knotze f
- Old English: cnotta
- Old Norse: knútr
- Icelandic: knútur, hnútur
- Faroese: knútur
- Norwegian Nynorsk: knut
- Old Swedish: knūter
- → Finnish: nuttura
- Swedish: knut
- Danish: knude
- Norwegian Bokmål: knute
- →? Norwegian Nynorsk: knute
- Norwegian Bokmål: knute
- ⇒ Old Norse: Knútr
- Icelandic: Knútur
- Faroese: Knútur
- Norwegian: Knut
- Swedish: Knut
- Danish: Knud
- → Greenlandic: Kunuuti
- → Anglo-Norman: *Canut, Kenut
- → Middle English: Canut
- English: Canute
- → Medieval Latin: Canūtus
- → Middle English: Canut
- → Old East Slavic: кнутъ (knutŭ)
- Russian: кнут (knut), кнутъ (knut)
- → French: knout
- → English: knout
- → German: Knute
- → Serbo-Croatian:
- Cyrillic: кну̏т
- Latin: knȕt
- → Serbo-Croatian:
- → Greek: κνούτο (knoúto)
- → Plautdietsch: Knutt
- → Polish: knut
- → Romanian: cnut
- → Slovak: knuta
- → French: knout
- Russian: кнут (knut), кнутъ (knut)