Could someone illuminate for me how PGmc *suma and *sama(a) were derived?












2














Ie, I am assuming that they are both ultimately deriviative of PIE *sem-/*som-.



So, how are they derived from this, in terms of morphemes, and their meanings?



I have skimmed through both Ringe and Beekes. Excellent books, that I want to go through properly in the near future, but this question has been bugging me - the etymology at a later point in time was asked as part of a paper, and it annoyed me that I could not give a full explanation.



Would these two books be the best for getting a coherent understanding of theorised derivation processes and, in particular, PIE verbs? I've had some trouble wrapping my head around what can be said to be diachronic and what synchronic at times, fex when what processes were actively occurring, how salient the underlying analysis of x was, and the like.



Feel free to add sources/references/bibliographical details, I've read around a lot of related literature but not a lot on PIE qua PIE.



Many thanks.









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  • 1




    Would you mind giving a derivative from each of your reconstructed PGmc roots? For example, I don't know a root *suma, but I do know *sumaz (> ME some); is that the root you're thinking of, or do you mean a separate one that I'm not familiar with?
    – Draconis
    2 hours ago
















2














Ie, I am assuming that they are both ultimately deriviative of PIE *sem-/*som-.



So, how are they derived from this, in terms of morphemes, and their meanings?



I have skimmed through both Ringe and Beekes. Excellent books, that I want to go through properly in the near future, but this question has been bugging me - the etymology at a later point in time was asked as part of a paper, and it annoyed me that I could not give a full explanation.



Would these two books be the best for getting a coherent understanding of theorised derivation processes and, in particular, PIE verbs? I've had some trouble wrapping my head around what can be said to be diachronic and what synchronic at times, fex when what processes were actively occurring, how salient the underlying analysis of x was, and the like.



Feel free to add sources/references/bibliographical details, I've read around a lot of related literature but not a lot on PIE qua PIE.



Many thanks.









share







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takeru is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
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  • 1




    Would you mind giving a derivative from each of your reconstructed PGmc roots? For example, I don't know a root *suma, but I do know *sumaz (> ME some); is that the root you're thinking of, or do you mean a separate one that I'm not familiar with?
    – Draconis
    2 hours ago














2












2








2


1





Ie, I am assuming that they are both ultimately deriviative of PIE *sem-/*som-.



So, how are they derived from this, in terms of morphemes, and their meanings?



I have skimmed through both Ringe and Beekes. Excellent books, that I want to go through properly in the near future, but this question has been bugging me - the etymology at a later point in time was asked as part of a paper, and it annoyed me that I could not give a full explanation.



Would these two books be the best for getting a coherent understanding of theorised derivation processes and, in particular, PIE verbs? I've had some trouble wrapping my head around what can be said to be diachronic and what synchronic at times, fex when what processes were actively occurring, how salient the underlying analysis of x was, and the like.



Feel free to add sources/references/bibliographical details, I've read around a lot of related literature but not a lot on PIE qua PIE.



Many thanks.









share







New contributor




takeru is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.











Ie, I am assuming that they are both ultimately deriviative of PIE *sem-/*som-.



So, how are they derived from this, in terms of morphemes, and their meanings?



I have skimmed through both Ringe and Beekes. Excellent books, that I want to go through properly in the near future, but this question has been bugging me - the etymology at a later point in time was asked as part of a paper, and it annoyed me that I could not give a full explanation.



Would these two books be the best for getting a coherent understanding of theorised derivation processes and, in particular, PIE verbs? I've had some trouble wrapping my head around what can be said to be diachronic and what synchronic at times, fex when what processes were actively occurring, how salient the underlying analysis of x was, and the like.



Feel free to add sources/references/bibliographical details, I've read around a lot of related literature but not a lot on PIE qua PIE.



Many thanks.







etymology historical-linguistics proto-indo-european proto-germanic





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  • 1




    Would you mind giving a derivative from each of your reconstructed PGmc roots? For example, I don't know a root *suma, but I do know *sumaz (> ME some); is that the root you're thinking of, or do you mean a separate one that I'm not familiar with?
    – Draconis
    2 hours ago














  • 1




    Would you mind giving a derivative from each of your reconstructed PGmc roots? For example, I don't know a root *suma, but I do know *sumaz (> ME some); is that the root you're thinking of, or do you mean a separate one that I'm not familiar with?
    – Draconis
    2 hours ago








1




1




Would you mind giving a derivative from each of your reconstructed PGmc roots? For example, I don't know a root *suma, but I do know *sumaz (> ME some); is that the root you're thinking of, or do you mean a separate one that I'm not familiar with?
– Draconis
2 hours ago




Would you mind giving a derivative from each of your reconstructed PGmc roots? For example, I don't know a root *suma, but I do know *sumaz (> ME some); is that the root you're thinking of, or do you mean a separate one that I'm not familiar with?
– Draconis
2 hours ago










2 Answers
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They are indeed both from the same PIE root, which however is reconstructed with a laryngeal, *semH-.



PGmc *sama- "same" is a thematic derivative from the o-grade of this root, *somH-o-, found in many other IE languages (Gk. ὅμος, Skt. sama-).



PGmc *suma- "someone" is a thematic derivative from the zero grade of this root, *smH-o-, also with cognates e.g. Gk. ἁμο- "any".



Source: Kroonen, Proto-Germanic Dictionary.






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    0














    @Draconis



    Should have thought to make an account - and yes, reflexes would have been good practice, thank you.



    Yes, I am thinking of *sumaz, the reflexes would be same and some in ModEnglish; OEnglish same/sama, sum; ON samr, sumr (the former is freq in compunds); possibly Sanskrit samá, samā-; etc.






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      2 Answers
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      2 Answers
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      1














      They are indeed both from the same PIE root, which however is reconstructed with a laryngeal, *semH-.



      PGmc *sama- "same" is a thematic derivative from the o-grade of this root, *somH-o-, found in many other IE languages (Gk. ὅμος, Skt. sama-).



      PGmc *suma- "someone" is a thematic derivative from the zero grade of this root, *smH-o-, also with cognates e.g. Gk. ἁμο- "any".



      Source: Kroonen, Proto-Germanic Dictionary.






      share|improve this answer




























        1














        They are indeed both from the same PIE root, which however is reconstructed with a laryngeal, *semH-.



        PGmc *sama- "same" is a thematic derivative from the o-grade of this root, *somH-o-, found in many other IE languages (Gk. ὅμος, Skt. sama-).



        PGmc *suma- "someone" is a thematic derivative from the zero grade of this root, *smH-o-, also with cognates e.g. Gk. ἁμο- "any".



        Source: Kroonen, Proto-Germanic Dictionary.






        share|improve this answer


























          1












          1








          1






          They are indeed both from the same PIE root, which however is reconstructed with a laryngeal, *semH-.



          PGmc *sama- "same" is a thematic derivative from the o-grade of this root, *somH-o-, found in many other IE languages (Gk. ὅμος, Skt. sama-).



          PGmc *suma- "someone" is a thematic derivative from the zero grade of this root, *smH-o-, also with cognates e.g. Gk. ἁμο- "any".



          Source: Kroonen, Proto-Germanic Dictionary.






          share|improve this answer














          They are indeed both from the same PIE root, which however is reconstructed with a laryngeal, *semH-.



          PGmc *sama- "same" is a thematic derivative from the o-grade of this root, *somH-o-, found in many other IE languages (Gk. ὅμος, Skt. sama-).



          PGmc *suma- "someone" is a thematic derivative from the zero grade of this root, *smH-o-, also with cognates e.g. Gk. ἁμο- "any".



          Source: Kroonen, Proto-Germanic Dictionary.







          share|improve this answer














          share|improve this answer



          share|improve this answer








          edited 1 hour ago

























          answered 1 hour ago









          TKR

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              0














              @Draconis



              Should have thought to make an account - and yes, reflexes would have been good practice, thank you.



              Yes, I am thinking of *sumaz, the reflexes would be same and some in ModEnglish; OEnglish same/sama, sum; ON samr, sumr (the former is freq in compunds); possibly Sanskrit samá, samā-; etc.






              share|improve this answer








              New contributor




              takeru is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
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                0














                @Draconis



                Should have thought to make an account - and yes, reflexes would have been good practice, thank you.



                Yes, I am thinking of *sumaz, the reflexes would be same and some in ModEnglish; OEnglish same/sama, sum; ON samr, sumr (the former is freq in compunds); possibly Sanskrit samá, samā-; etc.






                share|improve this answer








                New contributor




                takeru is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
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                  0












                  0








                  0






                  @Draconis



                  Should have thought to make an account - and yes, reflexes would have been good practice, thank you.



                  Yes, I am thinking of *sumaz, the reflexes would be same and some in ModEnglish; OEnglish same/sama, sum; ON samr, sumr (the former is freq in compunds); possibly Sanskrit samá, samā-; etc.






                  share|improve this answer








                  New contributor




                  takeru is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
                  Check out our Code of Conduct.









                  @Draconis



                  Should have thought to make an account - and yes, reflexes would have been good practice, thank you.



                  Yes, I am thinking of *sumaz, the reflexes would be same and some in ModEnglish; OEnglish same/sama, sum; ON samr, sumr (the former is freq in compunds); possibly Sanskrit samá, samā-; etc.







                  share|improve this answer








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                  share|improve this answer



                  share|improve this answer






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                  answered 1 hour ago









                  takeru

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