< Reconstruction:Proto-West Germanic
Reconstruction:Proto-West Germanic/kukinā
Proto-West Germanic
Etymology
Borrowed from Late Latin cocīna, ultimately from Latin coquō (“cook”, verb).
Noun
*kukinā f[1]
- kitchen
Inflection
ōn-stem | ||
---|---|---|
Singular | ||
Nominative | *kukinā | |
Genitive | *kukinōn | |
Singular | Plural | |
Nominative | *kukinā | *kukinōn |
Accusative | *kukinōn | *kukinōn |
Genitive | *kukinōn | *kukinōnō |
Dative | *kukinōn | *kukinōm |
Instrumental | *kukinōn | *kukinōm |
Descendants
- Old English: cyċene
- Middle English: kychyn
- English: kitchen (see there for further descendants)
- Scots: kitchen, kitchin, ketchin, keetchen
- → Middle Irish: cisten
- Irish: cistin
- Manx: kishteen, kishtyn
- Scottish Gaelic: cidsin
- Middle English: kychyn
- Old Frisian: *kuken, *koken
- North Frisian: köögen
- Saterland Frisian: Köäkene
- West Frisian: koken
- Old Saxon: *kukina
- Middle Low German: kokene, kȫke
- Low German:
- Dutch Low Saxon: kökken
- German Low German: Köken, Köök
- Plautdietsch: Kjäakj
- → Danish: køkken
- → Estonian: köök
- → Faroese: køkur
- → Norwegian Nynorsk: kjøk, kjøken
- → Gutnish: kök
- → Norwegian Bokmål: kjøkken
- → Northern Sami: gievkkan
- → Old Swedish: køkia
- Swedish: kök
- → Finnish: kyökki
- Swedish: kök
- Low German:
- Middle Low German: kokene, kȫke
- Old Dutch: *cukina
- Middle Dutch: cuekene
- Dutch: keuken
- → Ligurian: keuke
- Middle Dutch: cuekene
- Old High German: chuhhina
- Middle High German: küche, kuche
- Alemannic German: Chuchi
- Swabian:
- Bavarian: Kuche, Kuhe, Kuchl (diminutive)
- Cimbrian: khuchl (diminutive)
- Mòcheno:
- Central Franconian:
- Hunsrik: Kich
- Kölsch: Kösch
- Luxembourgish: Kichen
- East Central German:
- Upper Saxon:
- Vilamovian: kych
- East Franconian:
- German: Küche
- Rhine Franconian: Kich, Kiech, Kisch
- Frankfurterisch: [kiʃ]
- Pennsylvania German: Kich
- Yiddish: קיך (kikh)
- Alemannic German: Chuchi
- → Czech: kuchyně (see there for further descendants)
- → Serbo-Croatian:
- Cyrillic: кухиња
- Latin: kuhinja
- → Slovene: kuhinja
- → Hungarian: konyha (via some Slavic language)
- Middle High German: küche, kuche
References
- Ringe, Donald; Taylor, Ann (2014) The Development of Old English (A Linguistic History of English; 2), Oxford: Oxford University Press, →ISBN, page 135: “PWGmc *kukinā”