< Reconstruction:Proto-West Germanic
Reconstruction:Proto-West Germanic/sunnā
Proto-West Germanic
Etymology
From Proto-Germanic *sunnǭ.
Noun
*sunnā f
- sun
Inflection
ōn-stem | ||
---|---|---|
Singular | Plural | |
Nominative | *sunnā | *sunnōn |
Accusative | *sunnōn | *sunnōn |
Genitive | *sunnōn | *sunnōnō |
Dative | *sunnōn | *sunnōm |
Instrumental | *sunnōn | *sunnōm |
Descendants
- Old English: sunne
- Middle English: sonne, sunne, sone, son, sune, sun, zonne, zunne, sunna, sunnæ, synne, soen
- English: sun
- Scots: sun
- Yola: zin
- Middle English: sonne, sunne, sone, son, sune, sun, zonne, zunne, sunna, sunnæ, synne, soen
- Old Frisian: sunne
- North Frisian: san
- Saterland Frisian: Sunne
- West Frisian: sinne
- Old Saxon: sunna
- Middle Low German: sunne
- Dutch Low Saxon: zunne
- German Low German: Sünn, Sünne
- Plautdietsch: Sonn
- Middle Low German: sunne
- Old Dutch: sunna
- Middle Dutch: sonne
- Dutch: zon
- Afrikaans: son
- Limburgish: zón
- West Flemish: zunne
- Zealandic: zunne
- Dutch: zon
- Middle Dutch: sonne
- Old High German: sunna
- Middle High German: sunne
- Alemannic German: Sunnä
- Walser: sunna, sunnu, sònnò, ŝchunna, ŝchunnà
- Bavarian: Son, suna, sune, sunne
- Cimbrian: sunn, sonde, zunna
- Mòcheno: sunn
- Central Franconian: Sonn
- German: Sonne
- Luxembourgish: Sonn
- Rhine Franconian:
- Palatine German: Sunn
- Pennsylvania German: Sunn
- Vilamovian: zunn, zun
- Yiddish: זון (zun)
- Alemannic German: Sunnä
- Middle High German: sunne