Reconstruction:Proto-Germanic/-ōną
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Proto-Germanic
[edit]Etymology
[edit]From two sources, both reflecting earlier *-ōjaną:
- From Proto-Indo-European *-eh₂yéti, an innovated compound suffix from *-éh₂ (eh₂-stem noun suffix) + *-yéti (verbal suffix). These were originally formed as denominative verbs from ō-stem nouns. When attached to thematic (a-stem) nouns, the thematic vowel was also retained, but the resulting compound suffix *-eyé- became part of the first weak class instead.
- From Proto-Indo-European *-(e)h₂yéti, an innovated compound suffix from *-(e)h₂ti (factitive verb suffix) which was originally athematic, but later extended with the thematic present suffix *-yéti.
Cognates include Latin -āre (the whole first conjugation in the present) together with its Proto-Italic ancestor *-āō, Ancient Greek -άω (-áō, contracted verb), -अयति (-ayati) (for the causative in Sanskrit), Proto-Celtic *-āti and Proto-Balto-Slavic *-ā́ˀtei (whence the infinite Proto-Slavic *-ati, referring again to the whole conjugation).
Note that Ringe (2017) reconstructs this suffix with a trimoric vowel, *-ôną (or, following his own conventions, *-ō̄ną). See Ringe (2017: 160).
Pronunciation
[edit]Verb
[edit]*-ōną
- Suffix of the infinitive. Creates denominative verbs from nouns.
- Suffix of the infinitive. Creates factitive verbs from adjectives.
Inflection
[edit]Conjugation of *-ōną (weak class 2)
Derived terms
[edit]Descendants
[edit]This class eventually became the dominant and most productive verb class in all daughter languages.