πππππ
Oscan
Etymology
From Proto-Italic *terzom, from Proto-Indo-European *ters-o-, ultimately from *ters- (βdryβ).[1]
Noun
πππππ β’ (terΓΊm)
Declension
| Declension of πππππ (terΓΊm) | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| singular | plural | ||
| nominative | πππππ / ππππππ terΓΊm / teerΓΊm |
*ππππ *terΓΊ | |
| accusative | πππππ / ππππππ terΓΊm / teerΓΊm |
*ππππ *terΓΊ | |
| genitive | ππππππ tereΓs |
*πππππ *terΓΊm | |
| ablative | *πππππ *terΓΊd |
*ππππππ *terΓΊΓs | |
| dative | *πππππ *terΓΊΓ |
*ππππππ *terΓΊΓs | |
| locative | πππππ tereΓ |
*ππππππ *terΓΊΓs | |
| Notes | |||
|
Forms marked with an asterisk (*) are assumed based on the second declension for neuter nouns of the Oscan language. When Oscan is transliterated into Latin script, ΓΊ is used to signify an "o" sound, while Γ signifies a close e. | |||
See also
- ππππππ (teerΓΊm) (nom.sg., acc.sg.)
- ππππππ (tereΓs) (gen.sg.)
- πππππ (tereΓ) (loc.sg.)
References
- ^ De Vaan, Michiel (2008), βsacerβ, in Etymological Dictionary of Latin and the other Italic Languages (Leiden Indo-European Etymological Dictionary Series; 7), Leiden, Boston: Brill, βISBN, pages 618β619