< Reconstruction:Proto-Slavic
Reconstruction:Proto-Slavic/mimo
Proto-Slavic
Etymology
From *minǫti (“to pass”) + *-mo.
Preposition
*mìmo
- (with genitive) by, past
Descendants
- East Slavic:
- Old East Slavic: ми́мо (mímo)
- Old Ruthenian: ми́мо (mímo); мы́мо (mímo) (dialectal)
- Belarusian: мі́ма (míma); мі́мо (mímo) (dialectal)
- Ukrainian: ми́мо (mýmo)
- Russian: ми́мо (mímo)
- Old Ruthenian: ми́мо (mímo); мы́мо (mímo) (dialectal)
- Old East Slavic: ми́мо (mímo)
- South Slavic:
- Old Church Slavonic:
- Old Cyrillic: мимо (mimo)
- Glagolitic: ⰿⰺⰿⱁ (mimo)
- Bulgarian: ми́мо (mímo) (obsolete)
- Serbo-Croatian:
- Cyrillic: мимо, ми̏мо
- Latin: mimo, mȉmo
- Slovene: mȋmo, mȇmo; mȋm (dialectal)
- Old Church Slavonic:
- West Slavic:
- Old Czech: mimo
- Czech: mimo, mímo; nimo (dialectal)
- Polabian: maimü
- Old Polish: mimo, miemo
- Polish: mimo; mńimo, ḿimoᵉ̯ (dialectal)
- Slovak: mimo
- Slovincian: ḿimo, ḿimᵘ̯o, mimœ
- Sorbian:
- Lower Sorbian: mimo
- Upper Sorbian: nimo
- Old Czech: mimo
Further reading
- Trubachyov, Oleg, editor (1992), “*mimo”, in Этимологический словарь славянских языков [Etymological Dictionary of Slavic Languages] (in Russian), issue 19 (*męs⁽'⁾arь – *morzakъ), Moscow: Nauka, →ISBN, page 50
- Vasmer, Max (1964–1973), “ми́мо”, in Этимологический словарь русского языка [Etymological Dictionary of the Russian Language] (in Russian), transl. and suppl. by Oleg Trubachyov, Moscow: Progress