πŒšπŒ–πŒ•πŒπŒ“

Oscan

Etymology

Inherited from Proto-Indo-European *dΚ°ughβ‚‚tαΈ—r ~ *dΚ°ugtrΓ©s (β€œdaughter”),[1] seemingly relevelled on the genitive stem like it was in Proto-Germanic *duhtΔ“r, Proto-Celtic *duxtΔ«r, etc.[n 1]

Noun

πŒšπŒ–πŒ•πŒπŒ“ β€’ (futΓ­rf

  1. daughter[1]
    • ? BCE, TEAN-2,[3] in Teanum:
      πŒ„πŒ[...] πŒ‹πŒžπŒ…πŒŠπŒ‰πŒ‰πŒž πŒŒπŒ‰πŒ[...] πŒšπŒ–πŒ•πŒπŒ“
      ep[...] lΓΊvkiiΓΊ min[...] futΓ­r
      Ep[...] Lucia, daughter of Min[...]
  2. a divine epithet. Genetrix[4]
    • 3rd century BCE, Tabula Osca, near Agnone:
      • side A, line 4:
        πŒšπŒ–πŒ•πŒ“πŒ„πŒ πŒŠπŒ„πŒ“πŒ“πŒπŒ‰πŒ€πŒ πŒ”πŒ•πŒ€πŒ•πŒπŒš
        futreΓ­ kerrΓ­iaΓ­ statΓ­f
        a statue to Genitrix Cerealis
      • side B, line 30:
        πŒšπŒ–πŒ–πŒ•πŒ“πŒ„πŒ
        fuutreΓ­
        to Genitrix
    • ? BCE, Conway 162, von Planta 180, from Macchia Valfortore:
      [πŒ”πŒ€πŒ“πŒ€πŒŠπŒ€]πŒŠπŒ‹πŒ–πŒŒ πŒŒπŒ€πŒ€πŒ•πŒ“πŒ„πŒπŒ” [...]πŒ“πŒ€πŒ” πŒšπŒ–πŒ•πŒ“πŒ„[πŒπŒ”...]πŒ„
      [saraka]klum maatreΓ­s [...]ras futre[Γ­s...]e
      temple? of Mother […] of Genetrix? […]

Declension

  • πŒšπŒ–πŒ•πŒπŒ“ (futΓ­r) (nominative singular)
  • πŒšπŒ–πŒ–πŒ•πŒ“πŒ„πŒ (fuutreΓ­), πŒšπŒ–πŒ•πŒ“πŒ„πŒ (futreΓ­) (dative singular)
  • πŒšπŒ–πŒ•πŒ“πŒ„[πŒπŒ”] (futre[Γ­s]) (genitive singular)?

Notes

  1. ^ Traditionally the loss of original *ghβ‚‚ with lengthening of the preceding vowel was compared to the tentative parallel πŒπŒπŒ… (Γ­Γ­v, β€œI”),[2] from Proto-Indo-European *Γ©Η΅hβ‚‚.

References

  1. ↑ 1.0 1.1 De Vaan, Michiel (2008), β€œO. futΓ­r”, in Etymological Dictionary of Latin and the other Italic Languages (Leiden Indo-European Etymological Dictionary Series; 7), Leiden, Boston: Brill, β†’ISBN, page 253
  2. ^ Paul Kretschmer (1932), β€œZu osk. fΕ«tir”, in Glotta, volume 21, number 1/2, β†’JSTOR, page 100
  3. ^ TITUS, Osco-Umbrian Corpus, part 278
  4. ^ Buck, Carl Darling (1904), β€œFuutreí”, in A Grammar of Oscan and Umbrian: With a Collection of Inscriptions and a Glossary, page 317