πππππππππππ
Umbrian
Etymology
Uncertain. Ultimately from the root Proto-Indo-European *preαΈ±-. It may derive from Proto-Italic *pepork-, the perfect stem of *porskΕ, whence also Latin poscΕ. Alternatively, it may reflect an earlier term from the same root that is not affixed with *-sαΈ±Γ©ti. Poultney suggests that this verb may derive from Proto-Italic *pe-pork-usent or *pe-prΜ₯k-usent.
Verb
πππππππππππ β’ (pepurkurent) (3rd-person plural future perfect active) (early Iguvine)
- to demand
- Iguvine Tablets Vb.6:
- πππππππππππ ππππππ
- pepurkurent herifi
- Translation by Charles Darling Buck
- shall have urged to be necessary
- πππππππππππ ππππππ
References
- Poultney, James Wilson (1959), The Bronze Tables of Iguviumβ[1], Baltimore: American Philological Association
- Buck, Carl Darling (1904), A Grammar of Oscan and Umbrian: With a Collection of Inscriptions and a Glossary
- De Vaan, Michiel (2008), Etymological Dictionary of Latin and the other Italic Languages (Leiden Indo-European Etymological Dictionary Series; 7), Leiden, Boston: Brill, βISBN, page 483
- B. B. Xodorkovskaja (1 January 1975), βThe Root Perfect and the Structure of the Verbal Root in Latinβ, in Linguistics: An Interdisciplinary Journal of the Language Sciencesβ[2], volume 13, number 145, , βISSN, page 108
- Oswald SzemerΓ©nyi (1960), βEtyma Latina I. (1-6)β, in Glottaβ[3], volume 38, number 3/4, βISSN, pages 216β251