Below we display: a Proto-Indo-European (PIE) etymon adapted from Pokorny, with our
own English gloss; our Semantic Field
Reflexes are annotated with: Part-of-Speech and/or other Grammatical
All reflex pages are currently under active construction; as time goes on, corrections may be made and/or more etyma & reflexes may be added.
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Pokorny Etymon: uoro- 'madness; dizziness, weariness'
Semantic Fields: Mad, Crazy, Insane; Weak, Infirm
Indo-European Reflexes:
| Family/Language | PoS/Gram. | Gloss | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| English | ||||||||
| Old English: | mere-werig | adj | weary of seafaring, lit. sea-weary | ASD | ||||
| werig | adj | weary | LRC | |||||
| Middle English: | wery | adj | weary | W7 | ||||
| English: | weariness | n | tiredness, state/quality of being weary | W7 | ||||
| weary | adj | worn out, exhausted | LRC | |||||
| W-Germanic | ||||||||
| Old Saxon: | sið-worig | adj | lit. travel-weary | ASD | ||||
| Old High German: | wuorag/worag | adj | drunk, intoxicated | W7/ASD | ||||
| N-Germanic | ||||||||
| Old Norse: | oerr | adj | mad, frantic | LRC | ||||
| Hellenic | ||||||||
| Greek: | horakian | vb | to faint | W7 | ||||
Key to Part-of-Speech/Grammatical feature abbreviations:
| Abbrev. | Meaning | |
|---|---|---|
| adj | = | adjective |
| n | = | noun |
| vb | = | verb |
Key to information Source codes (always with 'LRC' as editor):
| Code | Citation | |
|---|---|---|
| ASD | = | Joseph Bosworth and T. Northcote Toller: An Anglo-Saxon Dictionary (1898) |
| LRC | = | Linguistics Research Center, University of Texas, Austin |
| W7 | = | Webster's Seventh New Collegiate Dictionary (1963) |