< Reconstruction:Proto-Slavic
Reconstruction:Proto-Slavic/grǫbъ
Proto-Slavic
Etymology
Related to German grob, Low German groff, Dutch grof, and English gruff.
Adjective
*grǫbъ[1][2]
- coarse, rude
Inflection
This adjective needs an inflection-table template.
Descendants
- East Slavic:
- Belarusian: гру́бы (hrúby)
- Russian: гру́бый (grúbyj)
- → Lithuanian: grubus
- → Latvian: grubuļains
- Ukrainian: гру́бий (hrúbyj)
- South Slavic:
- Bulgarian: груб (grub)
- Macedonian: груб (grub)
- Serbo-Croatian:
- Cyrillic: гру̑б
- Latin: grȗb
- Slovene: grọ̑b (tonal orthography)
- West Slavic:
- Old Czech: hrubý
- Czech: hrubý
- → Silesian: hruby, ruby
- Kashubian: grëbi
- Polish: gręby, gruby
- Silesian: hruby
- Slovak: hrubý
- Old Czech: hrubý
References
- Derksen, Rick (2008), “*grǫbъ; *grubъ”, in Etymological Dictionary of the Slavic Inherited Lexicon (Leiden Indo-European Etymological Dictionary Series; 4), Leiden, Boston: Brill, →ISBN, page 192: “adj. o ‘coarse, rude’”
- Olander, Thomas (2001), “grǫbъ grǫba grǫbo”, in Common Slavic accentological word list, Copenhagen: Editiones Olander: “b (SA 21); c (PR 138) grov”