< Reconstruction:Proto-Germanic
Reconstruction:Proto-Germanic/snuzō
Proto-Germanic
Etymology
From Proto-Indo-European *snuséh₂ (“daughter-in-law”).
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /ˈsnu.zɔː/
Noun
*snuzō f
- daughter-in-law
Inflection
ō-stemDeclension of *snuzō (ō-stem) | |||
---|---|---|---|
singular | plural | ||
nominative | *snuzō | *snuzôz | |
vocative | *snuzō | *snuzôz | |
accusative | *snuzǭ | *snuzōz | |
genitive | *snuzōz | *snuzǫ̂ | |
dative | *snuzōi | *snuzōmaz | |
instrumental | *snuzō | *snuzōmiz |
Descendants
- Old English: snoru
- Old Frisian: snore
- Old Saxon: *snura, *snora
- Middle Low German: snare, snore, snōr
- Old Dutch: *snura
- Middle Dutch: snore, snoere, snare
- Dutch: snaar, snoer
- Middle Dutch: snore, snoere, snare
- Old High German: snura
- Middle High German: snuor, snur
- Alemannic German: Schnuer
- German: Schnur
- Luxembourgish: Schnouer
- Yiddish: שנור (shnur)
- Middle High German: snuor, snur
- Old Norse: snor, snør
- Icelandic: snör
- Crimean Gothic: schuos (presumably a misspelling of *schnos)