< Reconstruction:Proto-West Germanic
Reconstruction:Proto-West Germanic/selh
Proto-West Germanic
Etymology
From Proto-Germanic *selhaz.
Noun
*selh m[1]
- seal (animal)
Inflection
Masculine a-stem | ||
---|---|---|
Singular | ||
Nominative | *selh | |
Genitive | *selhas | |
Singular | Plural | |
Nominative | *selh | *selhō, *selhōs |
Accusative | *selh | *selhā |
Genitive | *selhas | *selhō |
Dative | *selhē | *selhum |
Instrumental | *selhu | *selhum |
Descendants
- Old English: seolh
- Middle English: *selh, sele
- Early Scots: selich
- Scots: selch; selkie, silkie
- English: seal
- Early Scots: selich
- Middle English: *selh, sele
- Old Frisian: *selch
- North Frisian: selich
- Old Saxon: *selh, *selah
- Middle Low German: sēl, sale
- Plautdietsch: Säajel
- ⇒ Low German: saalhund
- Middle Low German: sēl, sale
- Old Dutch: *selh
- Middle Dutch: sēel, sāel, sēle
- Old High German: selah
- Middle High German: sëleh
- German: Seel (obsolete)
- ⇒ German: Seelhund ⇒ Seehund
- German: Seel (obsolete)
- Middle High German: sëleh
References
- Ringe, Donald; Taylor, Ann (2014) The Development of Old English (A Linguistic History of English; 2), Oxford: Oxford University Press, →ISBN, page 307: “PWGmc *selh”