πππππ
Oscan
Etymology
Inherited from Proto-Indo-European *dΚ°ughβtαΈr ~ *dΚ°ugtrΓ©s (βdaughterβ),[1] seemingly relevelled on the genitive stem like it was in Proto-Germanic *duhtΔr, Proto-Celtic *duxtΔ«r, etc.[n 1]
Noun
πππππ β’ (futΓr) f
- daughter[1]
- a divine epithet. Genetrix[4]
- 3rd century BCE, Tabula Osca, near Agnone:
- side A, line 4:
- ππππππ ππππππππ ππππππ
- futreΓ kerrΓiaΓ statΓf
- a statue to Genitrix Cerealis
- side B, line 30:
- πππππππ
- fuutreΓ
- to Genitrix
- side A, line 4:
- ? BCE, Conway 162, von Planta 180, from Macchia Valfortore:
- [ππππππ]ππππ ππππππππ [...]πππ πππππ[ππ...]π
- [saraka]klum maatreΓs [...]ras futre[Γs...]e
- temple? of Mother [β¦] of Genetrix? [β¦]
- 3rd century BCE, Tabula Osca, near Agnone:
Declension
- πππππ (futΓr) (nominative singular)
- πππππππ (fuutreΓ), ππππππ (futreΓ) (dative singular)
- πππππ[ππ] (futre[Γs]) (genitive singular)?
Notes
References
- β 1.0 1.1 De Vaan, Michiel (2008), βO. futΓrβ, in Etymological Dictionary of Latin and the other Italic Languages (Leiden Indo-European Etymological Dictionary Series; 7), Leiden, Boston: Brill, βISBN, page 253
- ^ Paul Kretschmer (1932), βZu osk. fΕ«tirβ, in Glotta, volume 21, number 1/2, βJSTOR, page 100
- ^ TITUS, Osco-Umbrian Corpus, part 278
- ^ Buck, Carl Darling (1904), βFuutreΓβ, in A Grammar of Oscan and Umbrian: With a Collection of Inscriptions and a Glossary, page 317