< Reconstruction:Proto-Germanic 
  
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
	
    
    
        
      Reconstruction:Proto-Germanic/midjasumaraz
Proto-Germanic
    
    Etymology
    
From *midjaz (“mid”) + *sumaraz (“summer”). Cognate with Proto-Celtic *medyosamonyos.
Pronunciation
    
- IPA(key): /ˌmið.jɑ.ˈsu.mɑ.rɑz/
Inflection
    
	
| masculine a-stemDeclension of *midjasumaraz (masculine a-stem) | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| singular | plural | ||
| nominative | *midjasumaraz | *midjasumarōz, *midjasumarōs | |
| vocative | *midjasumar | *midjasumarōz, *midjasumarōs | |
| accusative | *midjasumarą | *midjasumaranz | |
| genitive | *midjasumaras, *midjasumaris | *midjasumarǫ̂ | |
| dative | *midjasumarai | *midjasumaramaz | |
| instrumental | *midjasumarō | *midjasumaramiz | |
Descendants
    
- Old English: *middesumor, midsumer, midsumor
- Old Frisian: midsumur
- West Frisian: midsimmer
 
- Old Saxon: *middisumar
- Middle Low German: midsōmer, mitsōmer, mitsommer
- Low German: Mitsömmer, Midsömmer
 
 
- Middle Low German: midsōmer, mitsōmer, mitsommer
- Old Dutch: *midsumar
- Middle Dutch: midsomer
- Dutch: midzomer
 
 
- Middle Dutch: midsomer
- Old High German: *mittisumar
- Middle High German: mittersumer
- German: Mittsommer
- Yiddish: מיטזומער (mitzumer)
 
 
- Middle High German: mittersumer
- Old Norse: miðsumar
    This article is issued from Wiktionary. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.
