After a review of previous attempts to interpret the Common Slavic *gotov 'ready, prepared, finished', Trubacev's etymology, which traces it back to a supine in -t(e)u- from PIE "ga-/ga 'to go', is judged to be the only promising explanation and is further developed by the authors. They assume that underlying the Slavic adjective there is the dative of a protero-kinetic verbal noun and compare the derivation of OInd. participia necessitatis in -tavya-, perhaps also the Greek -, from dative-based infinitives in *-teuei gt Vedic-tave, with the stress originally laid on the suffix syllable, which accounts for the zero-grade root vocalism of the Slavic word
This paper proposes a new sound rule for Proto-Slavic, according to which *g (from PIE *g, *gw, *gh,...
From the point of view of word formation and semantics, it seems the Tocharian B adverb <em>twār </e...
The standard etymological explanation of the Proto-Slavic adjective *svętъ ‘holy, saint’ – a word of...
In the Etymological Dictionary of Slavic Languages (ESSJa 19: 24f.)O.N. Trubaéev reconstructs a Com...
The history of the Slavic word for ‘morning’ constitutes an old problem of Slavic etymology. Forms s...
Common Slavic words *rěč', *slovo and *besěda all came to express, in different Slavic languages, th...
This paper proposes a new sound rule for Proto-Slavic, according to which *g (from PIE *g, *gw, *gh,...
<p>The article contains three etudes on Slavic etymology. Word-formative and semantic aspects are th...
This paper proposes a new sound rule for Proto-Slavic, according to which *g (from PIE *g, *gw, *gh,...
The Slavic word četa, which is found in modern Slavic languages with the meanings 'pair', 'band', 't...
Three approaches to the etymology of Slavic * - are developed under two complementary assumptions ab...
The paper deals with possible traces of the Indo-European adjective suffix *-ṷent-/ *-ṷn̥ t-in the o...
Prefixes, like prepositions, trace back to the immutable words, close to adverbial - relational elem...
This work examines the etymologies of Slavic lexemes which can be reconstructed back to Nostratic ro...
In this paper we shall focus our attention. on several aspects of the ongm and nature of homonymy, d...
This paper proposes a new sound rule for Proto-Slavic, according to which *g (from PIE *g, *gw, *gh,...
From the point of view of word formation and semantics, it seems the Tocharian B adverb <em>twār </e...
The standard etymological explanation of the Proto-Slavic adjective *svętъ ‘holy, saint’ – a word of...
In the Etymological Dictionary of Slavic Languages (ESSJa 19: 24f.)O.N. Trubaéev reconstructs a Com...
The history of the Slavic word for ‘morning’ constitutes an old problem of Slavic etymology. Forms s...
Common Slavic words *rěč', *slovo and *besěda all came to express, in different Slavic languages, th...
This paper proposes a new sound rule for Proto-Slavic, according to which *g (from PIE *g, *gw, *gh,...
<p>The article contains three etudes on Slavic etymology. Word-formative and semantic aspects are th...
This paper proposes a new sound rule for Proto-Slavic, according to which *g (from PIE *g, *gw, *gh,...
The Slavic word četa, which is found in modern Slavic languages with the meanings 'pair', 'band', 't...
Three approaches to the etymology of Slavic * - are developed under two complementary assumptions ab...
The paper deals with possible traces of the Indo-European adjective suffix *-ṷent-/ *-ṷn̥ t-in the o...
Prefixes, like prepositions, trace back to the immutable words, close to adverbial - relational elem...
This work examines the etymologies of Slavic lexemes which can be reconstructed back to Nostratic ro...
In this paper we shall focus our attention. on several aspects of the ongm and nature of homonymy, d...
This paper proposes a new sound rule for Proto-Slavic, according to which *g (from PIE *g, *gw, *gh,...
From the point of view of word formation and semantics, it seems the Tocharian B adverb <em>twār </e...
The standard etymological explanation of the Proto-Slavic adjective *svętъ ‘holy, saint’ – a word of...