< Reconstruction:Proto-Slavic
Reconstruction:Proto-Slavic/krinica
Proto-Slavic
Alternative reconstructions
- *krьnica
Etymology
Unknown, maybe identical to the container name *krina.
Noun
*krinica f
- slough, gully
Descendants
- East Slavic:
- Belarusian: крыні́ца (kryníca, “spring, source”)
- Russian: крини́ца (kriníca, “spring, well”), крыни́ца (kryníca) (dialectal)
- Ukrainian: крини́ця (krynýcja, “spring, well”)
- → Polish: krynica
- → Yiddish: קרעניצע (krenitse)
- South Slavic:
- Serbo-Croatian:
- Cyrillic: кр̀ница
- Latin: kr̀nica
- Slovene: krníca (“deep spot in river or lake, vortex, basin”)
- Serbo-Croatian:
- West Slavic:
- Polabian: krėnéica (“spring, well”)
- Old Sorbian: krinica
- Names:
- Czech: Křinec, a town
- Czech: Křinice, a village
- Czech: Křeničná, a village
- German: Krien, a village southwest of Anklam, 1253 Krina
- German: Krienkowsee, a lake southwest of Boitzenburg
- German: Obere Krienke, Untere Krienke, protrusions of the river Welse
- German: Krönitz, Kreutz, a lake near Demmin formerly so called
- German: Crinitz / Lower Sorbian: Krynica and formerly other forms, a village in Lower Lusatia
- 🖝 See Polish Wikipedia on “Krynica” for many places of this name in Poland.
Further reading
- Derksen, Rick (2008), “*krinica II; *krьnica”, in Etymological Dictionary of the Slavic Inherited Lexicon (Leiden Indo-European Etymological Dictionary Series; 4), Leiden, Boston: Brill, →ISBN, page 248: “f. jā”
- Trubachyov, Oleg, editor (1985), “*krinica, *krьnica”, in Этимологический словарь славянских языков [Etymological Dictionary of Slavic Languages] (in Russian), issue 12 (*koulъkъ – *kroma / *kromъ), Moscow: Nauka, page 158
- Vasmer, Max (1964–1973), “крини́ца”, in Этимологический словарь русского языка [Etymological Dictionary of the Russian Language] (in Russian), transl. and suppl. by Oleg Trubachyov, Moscow: Progress