< Reconstruction:Proto-West Germanic
Reconstruction:Proto-West Germanic/sad
Proto-West Germanic
Etymology
From Proto-Germanic *sadaz, from Proto-Indo-European *seh₂- (“to satiate, satisfy”).
Adjective
*sad
- sated, full
Inflection
a-stem | |||
---|---|---|---|
Singular | Masculine | ||
Nominative | *sad | ||
Genitive | *sadas | ||
Singular | Masculine | Feminine | Neuter |
Nominative | *sad | *sadu | *sad |
Accusative | *sadanā | *sadā | *sad |
Genitive | *sadas | *sadeʀā | *sadas |
Dative | *sadumē | *sadeʀē | *sadumē |
Instrumental | *sadu | *sadeʀu | *sadu |
Plural | Masculine | Feminine | Neuter |
Nominative | *sadē | *sadō | *sadu |
Accusative | *sadā | *sadā | *sadu |
Genitive | *sadeʀō | *sadeʀō | *sadeʀō |
Dative | *sadēm, *sadum | *sadēm, *sadum | *sadēm, *sadum |
Instrumental | *sadēm, *sadum | *sadēm, *sadum | *sadēm, *sadum |
Derived terms
- *saddjan
- *sadōn
Descendants
- Old English: sæd
- Middle English: seed, ceed, ceede, sed, sede, sedde, seede, seide, seod, seth, seyd, seyde, side, syd, zed; sad, sæd, sæt
- English: seed
- Scots: seed, seid, sid
- Yola: zeade
- Middle English: seed, ceed, ceede, sed, sede, sedde, seede, seide, seod, seth, seyd, seyde, side, syd, zed; sad, sæd, sæt
- Old Frisian: sed
- Saterland Frisian: sääd
- West Frisian: sêd
- Old Saxon: sad
- Middle Low German: sat
- German Low German: satt
- Middle Low German: sat
- Old Dutch: sad, sat
- Middle Dutch: sat
- Dutch: zat (with unetymological -t)
- Middle Dutch: sat
- Old High German: sat
- Middle High German: sat
- German: satt
- Luxembourgish: sat
- Yiddish: זאַט (zat)
- Middle High German: sat