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This Proto-West Germanic entry contains reconstructed terms and roots. As such, the term(s) in this entry are not directly attested, but are hypothesized to have existed based on comparative evidence.
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Proto-West Germanic
Etymology
From Proto-Germanic *sunuz.
Noun
*sunu m[1]
- son
Inflection
| u-stem
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Singular
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| Nominative
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*sunu
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| Genitive
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*sunau
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Singular
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Plural
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| Nominative
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*sunu
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*suniwi
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| Accusative
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*sunu
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*sunū
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| Genitive
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*sunau
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*suniwō
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| Dative
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*suniwi
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*sunum
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| Instrumental
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*sunu
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*sunum
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Descendants
- Old English: sunu
- Old Frisian: sunu
- North Frisian:
- Föhr-Amrum: sön
- Mooring: saan
- Sylt: Seen
- Saterland Frisian: Súun
- West Frisian: soan
- Old Saxon: sunu
- Middle Low German: sune, sȫne
- Low German: Söhn
- German Low German: Söhn
- Westphalian:
- Lippisch: Suhne m
- Ravensbergisch: Suone
- Sauerländisch: Suen, Seyen, Sōn
- Westmünsterländisch: Sönn, Sonn, Sonne
- Plautdietsch: Sän
- Old Dutch: *sunu
- Old High German: sunu, sun
References
- ^ Ringe, Donald; Taylor, Ann (2014), The Development of Old English (A Linguistic History of English; 2), Oxford: Oxford University Press, →ISBN, page 43: “PWGmc *sunu”