Abstract
This paper investigates the meaning and the etymology of TB pitke. Based on a philological study of Sanskrit, Chinese and Tibetan parallel texts, the meaning of TB pitke can be determined to be ‘fat, grease, oil’. TB pitke corresponds to Skt. medas- ‘fat’, Tib. tshil ‘fat, grease’ and Chin. 脂zhī ‘fat, grease’. The philological identification of the meaning of TB pitke as ‘fat, grease, oil’ opens the door to an etymological connection with PIE *pei̯H- ‘to be fat, swell’, and, based on the historical phonology of Tocharian, leads to the determination of the laryngeal as *‑h1.
Online erschienen: 2019-09-18
Erschienen im Druck: 2019-09-18
© 2019 by Walter de Gruyter Berlin/Boston
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Articles in the same Issue
- Titelei
- Inhalt
- Dating Sanskrit texts using linguistic features and neural networks
- Some difficult Tocharian genitives
- Kleines Lautgesetz, große Wirkung
- Germanic *ƀra (PIE *pro) as ditropic clitic and the etymology of *ƀrenga-, *ƀrūka- and *ƀraiđ̯a-
- Definite referential null objects in Old Hittite
- An apple a day …
- Phonotactics of the Lycian labial glide clusters
- Indo-European cladistic nomenclature
- The origin of non-canonical case marking of subjects in Proto-Indo-European
- TB pitke ‘fat, grease, oil’ and PIE *peih̯1- ‘to be fat, be bursting with’
- Indo-European syntax in disguise
- On Indo-European superlative suffixes
- Old Irish aue ‘descendant’ and its descendants