naor: Difference between revisions

From Laenkea
Jump to navigation Jump to search
No edit summary
m (Removed redundant {{Etymology}} template)
 
(5 intermediate revisions by 2 users not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
==Riyan==
==Riyan==


===Etymology===
=== Etymology ===
{{root|ryn|lnk-pro|towcʰ-}}
{{root|ryn|lnk-pro|towcʰ-}}
From {{inherit|ryn|ryn-o|naod}}, from {{inherit|ryn|ryn-pro|nahṓdu}}, from {{inherit|ryn|hrd-pro|naṯṓchus|t=evening}}, from {{inherit|ryn|lnk-pro|towcʰ-|natowcʰos|t=night}}. The meaning of "evening" remained until around the 4th century where it began to shift in meaning to the amount of time between two evenings. Eventually, this came to be the general term for the period of one day (i.e. 24 hours). This is contrast to {{m|ryn|zúl}} which, though it originally meant "day" in both senses, narrowed to only mean "daytime" (i.e. the period between sunset and sunrise) to accommodate the semantic shifting of ''naor''.
From {{inherit|ryn|ryn-o|naod}}, from {{inherit|ryn|ryn-pro|nahṓdu}}, from {{inherit|ryn|hrd-pro|naṯṓchus|t=evening}}, from {{inherit|ryn|lnk-pro|towcʰ-|natowcʰos|t=night}}. The meaning of "evening" remained until around the 4th century where it began to shift in meaning to the amount of time between two evenings. Eventually, this came to be the general term for the period of one day (i.e. 24 hours). This is contrast to {{m|ryn|zúl}} which, though it originally meant "day" in both senses, narrowed to only mean "daytime" (i.e. the period between sunset and sunrise) to accommodate the semantic shifting of ''naor''.
Line 13: Line 13:


# {{eng|day}} (period of 24 hours)
# {{eng|day}} (period of 24 hours)
====Derived terms====
{{col|ryn|annaor<t:one day>|tonaor<t:today>|nannaor<t:week>}}


====See also====
====See also====

Latest revision as of 14:44, 20 August 2024

Riyan

Etymology

From Old Riyan naod, from Proto-Riyanic *nahṓdu, from Proto-Hirdic *naṯṓchus (“evening”), from Proto-Laenkean *natowcʰos (“night”). The meaning of "evening" remained until around the 4th century where it began to shift in meaning to the amount of time between two evenings. Eventually, this came to be the general term for the period of one day (i.e. 24 hours). This is contrast to zúl which, though it originally meant "day" in both senses, narrowed to only mean "daytime" (i.e. the period between sunset and sunrise) to accommodate the semantic shifting of naor.

Pronunciation

Noun

naor (dual naorad, plural naodis, collective naodiva)

  1. day (period of 24 hours)

Derived terms

See also

  • zúl (“daytime”)

Mutation

Riyan mutation
radical lenited
naor unchanged