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引用次数: 0
摘要
拉丁文的鸟名columba(鸽子,鸽子)常被拿来与原斯拉夫语*gȍlǫbь ' id作比较。,以及希腊语κόλ ο μβος的“grebe,潜水的鸟”。然而,第一个比较在形式上是有问题的,而第二个比较在语义上是困难的。本文第一部分讨论了“拉”的词源和衍生历史。结论支持IE的形成可能与Slavic所反映的形成相似,但不同源。在第二部分,Gk。κολ ο μβος与动词κολ ο μβ α ο一起讨论,表明后者通常被认为是由前者衍生而来的说法不太可能。然后,这个词族提出了一个新的词源,认为κόλ μβος <*ḱolum - gʷ(h₂)- o -和未经证实的*κολυμβᾱ- & lt;*ḱolum‑g æ (h₂)‑eh₂-可由κολ μβ α ω推断而来,源于一个普遍存在的语法*ḱolum‑g æ eh₂-“被覆盖,淹没自己”。这些形式就是Gk的基式。καλ τω '掩盖,隐藏',最终反映了同一个名词的不同迂回用法的普遍性*ḱol-u-/*ḱel-u- '掩盖'。这一推导得到了希腊语中κολ ο μβ ω和καλ τω的形态句法相似性和短语搭配的支持。
Abstract The Latin bird-name columba ‘pigeon, dove’ has often invited comparison with Proto-Slavic *gȍlǫbь ‘id.’, as well as with Greek κόλυμβος ‘grebe, diving bird’. However, the first comparison is formally problematic, while the second one is semantically difficult. The first section of the present paper discusses the etymology and derivational history of Lat. columba, concluding in favor of an IE formation probably parallel to, but not cognate with, the one reflected by Slavic. In the second section, Gk. κόλυμβος is discussed together with the verb κολυμβάω ‘to dive’, showing that the commonly assumed derivation of the latter from the former is unlikely. A new etymology is then proposed for this word-family, arguing that both κόλυμβος < *ḱolum‑gʷ(h₂)‑o‑ and the unattested *κολυμβᾱ‑ < *ḱolum‑gʷ(h₂)‑eh₂‑ inferrable from κολυμβάω arose from the univerbation of a syntagm *ḱolum gʷeh₂- ‘to go covered, to submerge oneself’. These forms would then be coradical of Gk. καλύπτω ‘to cover, hide’, ultimately reflecting the univerbation of a different periphrasis with the same noun *ḱol-u-/*ḱel-u- ‘cover’. The proposed derivation is supported by morphosyntactic parallels across IE and by phraseological collocations of κολυμβάω and καλύπτω in Greek itself.
期刊介绍:
Indogermanische Forschungen publishes contributions (essays and reviews) mainly in the areas of historical-comparative linguistics, historical linguistics, typology and characteristics of the languages of the Indogermanic language family. Essays on general linguistics and non-Indogermanic languages are also featured, provided that they coincide with the main focus of the journal with respect to methods and language history.