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zyma
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by zyma » 12 Nov 2018 03:53
Is it related to any prefix in Biblical Gothic?
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spanick
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by spanick » 12 Nov 2018 03:53
GrandPiano wrote: ↑ 12 Nov 2018 03:50
Does veo- have an English cognate?
Yes.
Although,it occurs to me that this is not a prefix but rather a word prefixed to a verb to modify its meaning. By that, I mean that is not a prefix in the same way *ga- is, for instance.
spanick
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by spanick » 12 Nov 2018 03:53
shimobaatar wrote: ↑ 12 Nov 2018 03:53
Is it related to any prefix in Biblical Gothic?
See my response to hian de cot
GrandPiano
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by GrandPiano » 12 Nov 2018 03:56
Is the English cognate of veo- a noun?
spanick
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by spanick » 12 Nov 2018 03:58
GrandPiano wrote: ↑ 12 Nov 2018 03:56
Is the English cognate of veo- a noun?
No
zyma
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by zyma » 12 Nov 2018 04:02
spanick wrote: ↑ 12 Nov 2018 03:53
See my response to hian de cot
Lol
Is the English cognate an adverb or preposition?
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spanick
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by spanick » 12 Nov 2018 04:13
shimobaatar wrote: ↑ 12 Nov 2018 04:02
Is the English cognate an adverb or preposition?
Yes, adverb
zyma
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by zyma » 12 Nov 2018 13:10
Is the English cognate either one or two syllables?
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spanick
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by spanick » 12 Nov 2018 14:09
shimobaatar wrote: ↑ 12 Nov 2018 13:10
Is the English cognate either one or two syllables?
Yes, one.
Edit: the cognate of this word across modern Germanic languages is for the most part one syllable.
zyma
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by zyma » 12 Nov 2018 14:43
spanick wrote: ↑ 12 Nov 2018 14:09
shimobaatar wrote: ↑ 12 Nov 2018 13:10
Is the English cognate either one or two syllables?
Yes, one.
Edit: the cognate of this word across modern Germanic languages is for the most part one syllable.
Is the English cognate exclusively an adverb?
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spanick
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by spanick » 12 Nov 2018 14:50
shimobaatar wrote: ↑ 12 Nov 2018 14:43
spanick wrote: ↑ 12 Nov 2018 14:09
shimobaatar wrote: ↑ 12 Nov 2018 13:10
Is the English cognate either one or two syllables?
Yes, one.
Edit: the cognate of this word across modern Germanic languages is for the most part one syllable.
Is the English cognate exclusively an adverb?
No, but the adverb is by far the most common usage. I expect most people, when asked, would describe it as an adverb even though it can have other uses.
Salmoneus
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by Salmoneus » 12 Nov 2018 15:12
"well"?
EDIT: and if so, does the whole word mean something like "have a good urination" or "urinate fully"?
[i.e. from PGmc *welamīganą ?]
spanick
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by spanick » 12 Nov 2018 15:18
Yes
EDIT: and if so, does the whole word mean something like "have a good urination" or "urinate fully"?
[i.e. from PGmc *welamīganą ?]
No
Edit: just for fun, the Modern Gotski descendant of the word you proposed would be:
веoмaьан/veomajan
/veomaːjan/
zyma
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by zyma » 12 Nov 2018 17:05
Did the root of the verb begin with m- in Proto-Germanic?
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spanick
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by spanick » 12 Nov 2018 17:07
shimobaatar wrote: ↑ 12 Nov 2018 17:05
Did the root of the verb begin with m- in Proto-Germanic?
Yes
zyma
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by zyma » 12 Nov 2018 17:18
Was the vowel after m- front?
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spanick
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by spanick » 12 Nov 2018 17:26
shimobaatar wrote: ↑ 12 Nov 2018 17:18
Was the vowel after m- front?
Yes
zyma
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by zyma » 12 Nov 2018 19:22
Was it *i?
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zyma
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by zyma » 12 Nov 2018 19:39
*e?
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