lemÌc. Lemizh grammar and dictionary

Complete Lemizh / English dictionary with 782 lemmata

Ă .

relative pronoun type II level n: see unit 6, Relative pronouns

Etymology

NLem, LMLem, MLem a, formed after the Ghean relative pronouns
a f‑a s‑a sh‑a x‑a / fˇ‑a sˇ‑a shˇ‑a xˇ‑a
/a Éža s̟a ʃa χa / ÎČa z̟a ʒa ʁa/

alaĂ .

to make alders

Etymology

gender change of
NLem alaix‑a
Besk ÊŒaƂaix
PCelt *ális‑ā
PIE *hâ‚‚Ă©lis‑eh₂

This is one of many Beskidic tree names introduced in the TlöngĂ¶Ì€l. ‘Female’ (zero) poststems are almost universal in trees.

Cognates

Eng alder, Lat alnus ‘alder’

arĂ c.

to make a pressure unit, a pressure of 4.759 pascals (see appendix, Units of measurement)

Etymology

gender change of
NLem aer‑a, academic loan of
Koi ጀ᜔ρ ‘air, wind’
SHell *awᾗr
PIE *h₂uÌŻĂ©h₁‑r, r-stem noun of
  PIE *h₂uÌŻeh₁‑ ‘blow’

Like the momentum unit, this word was probably masculinised to show some vigour.

doublet of xnĂ t.

Cognates

Eng wi‑nd, Ger wehen ‘blow (wind)’

argĂ .

to make rivers (also the constellations Eridanus and Fornax; see appendix, Constellations)

argĂČ. a heroic, even hopeless plan; lit. ‘the intention to create rivers’

Etymology

NLem arg‑a
LMLem, MLem arg‑ar
OLem arg‑ ‘flow, drip’
PLem *arg‑, root present of
PIE *reg̑‑

Expected would be ModLem **rĂ g., but poststem formation was inhibited by the fact that rivers are mythologically female, as in other PIE languages.

Cognates

Ice raki ‘moisture, dampness’

artĂ .

to make blood

artĂš. blood forming organs

Etymology

NLem art‑a
LMLem, MLem art‑yr
OLem hart‑
PLem *hars‑ ‘flow’, root present of
PIE *h₁ers‑

Cognates

Eng err (via Lat errƍ ‘wander, get lost, err’), Ved ĂĄráčŁati ‘flow’

anĂ .

to make secrets, to make secret

anà: (colloquial, sarcastic answer to something obvious) really!? you don’t say!

Etymology

NLem an‑a
LMLem an‑yr
MLem an‑y‑yr ‘cat-like > secretive’, collective/abstract nominal of
  MLem an‑yr ‘cat’
Ghe axʱ‑ə̄ /aɎɯː/

anĂ gz.

to make a discussion round, a learning group, a class (group of students)

anĂČrgz. gathering place for discussion and teaching, especially a classroom or lecture hall

Usage notes

This isn’t to say that classes are always discussion rounds or learning groups. There are still schools where only teachers talk and students learn little.

Etymology

NLem anagzn‑a ‘gathering place for discussion and teaching’
LMLem, MLem angwnj‑yr ‘hearth, gathering place around a hearth’
OLem hangwnj‑ ‘hearth’
PLem *hangwnj‑
PIE *h₁nÌ„gÊ·ní‑s ‘fire’ [animate]

Cognates

Eng ignite (via Lat ignis ‘fire’)

anĂ kf.

to give someone-dat leave;
dat: to spend/take a vacation; a vacation

Etymology

NLem anakfr‑a
LMLem, MLem ankfr‑yr ‘idle’
OLem ankfr‑
PLem *ankfr‑, r-stem adjective of
PIE *negʷ‑ ‘naked, bare’

Various LMLem attempts to name the then-new Lemizh higher schools by calquing Koi ÎłÏ…ÎŒÎœáœ±ÏƒÎčÎżÎœ involved this word. They werde generally met with derision.

Cognates

Eng naked, Gk ÎłÏ…ÎŒÎœÏŒÏ‚ ‘naked, bare’

antĂ .

technically: to make glacial lakes, informally: to make large lakes

Etymology

academic back formation from
antÌ àrxy. ⇔ Ìx antàry. ⇒ antarÌx. ‘Attersee’
Dan Î‘ÎœÏ„Î±ÏÎżÏ‡

antarĂ x.

to make Attersee (a glacial lake in Danubia)

Etymology

Dan Î‘ÎœÏ„Î±ÏÎżÏ‡

amĂ .

to make ponds, small lakes

Etymology

NLem amy‑a, probably of British origin

agmĂ .

to make/build statues

Usage notes

Unsurprisingly, statues are commonly used as metaphors for slowness and immobility, as in lìl agmÌem. ‘be still like a statue’.

Etymology

NLem agm‑a
LMLem àgalma‑yr ‘statue, bust’
Koi áŒ„ÎłÎ±Î»ÎŒÎ±
Koi áŒ€ÎłÎŹÎ»Î»ÎżÎŒÎ±Îč ‘be proud, exult in’, of unknown origin

Ă gc.

to make fog

Etymology

NLem agjm‑a
LMLem aknw‑yr
MLem akn‑wU‑yr, compound of
  MLem akn‑yr ‘air’
Ghe aqâżâ€‘É™Ì„ /aqⁿɯː/
 —and—
  MLem wU‑yr ‘stubborn’
OLem wĂŒâ€‘
PLem *bwƫ‑ ‘insistent, (head)strong?’
PIE *bÊ°Ășg̑‑s ‘buck, he-goat’

Cognates

Eng buck, Ir boc ‘buck’

Ă d.

to give someone/something an identity (see unit 16, wh-questions)

Etymology

NLem yd‑a
LMLem, MLem yd‑yr
Ghe ətˇ‑ə̄ /ədɯː/

admĂ c.

to make atoms

Usage notes

Atoms have been used as a metaphor for the indivisibility of human dignity and rights. The most famous instance is the beginning of the human rights charta, written in NLem times.

Etymology

poststem from singular of
NLem adm‑a
LMLem àtom‑yr
Koi áŒ„â€‘Ï„ÎżÎŒâ€‘ÎżÏ‚ ‘uncuttable > atom’, nominalisation, compound of
  Koi ጀ‑ ‘un-’
SHell *n̄‑
PIE *n̄‑, zero-grade prefix of
  PIE *ne ‘no, not’
 —and—
  Koi Ï„áœłÎŒÎœâ€‘Ï‰ ‘cut’
SHell *tmÌ„n‑ƍ, nasal-infix present of
PIE *temh₁‑

Cognates

Eng atom; Eng un–; Eng contempt (via Lat con‑temnƍ ‘despise’)

Ă b.

to make fourteen individuals

Etymology

NLem ob‑a
LMLem, MLem ob‑yl
Ghe opˇ‑ə̄ /ɔbɯː/

Ă k.

to make air

Etymology

NLem akn‑a
LMLem, MLem akn‑yr
Ghe aqâżâ€‘É™Ì„ /aqⁿɯː/

Ă kh.

to make/build ships (also the constellation corresponding to parts of Carina, Vela and Puppis; see appendix, Constellations)

ykhÌk. airplane (⇐ ⇔ Ìkh Ùky. ‘ship for / benefitting from the air’)
ykhRÌzw. tram, streetcar (‘ship for streets’) – colloquially RÙzw.
ykhtÌcs. railway train (‘ship for dry land’) – colloquially tÙcs.
ykhtxÌb. underground railway train, tube train (‘ship for tunnels’) – colloquially txÙb. (especially in Shabar, the Lemizh capital)

Usage notes

Being a seafaring nation, the Lemizh use the word for ‘ship’ – pars pro toto – for other means of transport as well; see the compounds above.

Etymology

NLem akx‑a
LMLem, MLem akx‑yr
Ghe aqx‑ə̄ /aqÏ‡ÉŻË/

Ă tx.

to make sour, acidic, to give a sour taste to something-dat, to make an acid

ùtx. hydrogen (symbol: Ο)
Ìtx. (oxy)acid of an element-ten in the oxidation state six lower than the highest one;
of an element-com in the oxidation state four lower than the highest one;
of an element-ins in the oxidation state two lower than the highest one;
of an element-ben in the highest oxidation state
That’s blatant misuse of grammar by chemists.

Usage notes

If not qualified with a weakening numeral, this word usually describes something as having a really sour taste (up to and including strong acids in the chemical sense). This is attested from Early New Lemizh.

Chemical elements

123456789101112131415161718
1HHe
2LiBeBCNOFNe
3NaMgAlSiPSClAr
4KCaScTiVCrMnFeCoNiCuZnGaGeAsSeBrKr
5RbSrYZrNbMoTcRuRhPdAgCdInSnSbTeIXe
6CsBaLa*HfTaWReOsIrPtAuHgTlPbBiPoAtRn
7FrRaAc†RfDbSgBhHsMtDsRgCnNhFlMcLvTsOg
*CePrNdPmSmEuGdTbDyHoErTmYbLu
†ThPaUNpPuAmCmBkCfEsFmMdNoLr
123456789101112131415161718
1Ο
2ΕΒΑΖΓΩ
3Î‘Î»Î ÎŁÏ„ÎšÎ›Î˜Î§
4Î€Î“Ï…Î™Ï‡ÎŁÎœÎ™Ï„Î§Î±ÎšÎ±Îš
5ΙαΑρΚαΙ
6ΓλΠρ*Î§ÏÎ„ÎœÎżÎœÎ»
7Ωο†SÏ„Î Îż
*
†ΕÎč

Etymology

NLem Otx‑a
LMLem, MLem Otxx‑yr
Ghe ötxx‑ə̄ /ƓtÏ‡Ï‡ÉŻË/

atxĂ p.

to make (it) mid-morning, late morning

atxypkÌ. late evening

Usage notes

This is the time roughly between 9 a.m. and midday. The compound with the opposition negator denotes the time roughly between 9 p.m. and midnight. This word is complemented by odnÌ. ‘afternoon’.

Etymology

NLem atsap‑a ‘late morning’
LMLem àtsp‑yr
MLem aytsp‑yr ‘morning’
Ghe aəᮛsp‑ə̄ /a͜ətÌ s̟pɯː/

atxĂ c.

to make heads

Usage notes

Pars pro toto, this word often refers to people, as in English and other languages. It can, however, imply that the head is not their strongest part.

Etymology

poststem from singular of
NLem ats‑a
LMLem àts‑yr
MLem ayts‑yr
Ghe aə᎛ ̑‑ə̄ /aÍœÉ™É—Ì ÉŻË/

Ă pq.

to make gold (symbol: Χρ)

Usage notes

Gold is highly valued among artists, who have frequently been gold-plating all kinds of their work since Early New Lemizh times. This leaves the rest of the Lemizh population at a loss. In Modern Lemizh, Ìpq. is used metonymically to denote such gilded works.

Etymology

NLem apf‑a
LMLem, MLem aptf‑yr
Ghe aptf‑ə̄ /aptɞɯː/

Ă j.

to make sixteen individuals

Etymology

NLem anr‑a
LMLem, MLem anr‑yl
Ghe asÊ±â€‘áŽ›Êłâ€‘É™Ì„ /anrÌ ÉŻË/ ‘sixteen’, lit. ‘zero-one’, compound of
  Ghe asʱ‑ə̄ /anɯː/ ‘zero’
 —and—
  Ghe áŽ›Êłâ€‘É™Ì„ /rÌ ÉŻË/ ‘one’

The Gheans used the hexadecimal number system, and they appear to have written numbers starting with the unit digit, so 16decimal = 10hexadecimal = ‘01’ in Ghean digits.

Ă jb.

to be disgusted about something-acc/causal-transporting (also dat/causal-receiving, see unit 3, Ambiguous usage);
agentive caus, causal-reflexive: to disgust someone-nom

Usage notes

This word denotes bodily disgust as opposed to, say, intellectual or moral disgust. Maggots can be disgusting in this sense; stupidity, less so.

Etymology

NLem ojb‑a ‘disgusting’, metonymy of
LMLem ogb‑yr ‘loathing’
MLem ogb‑yr ‘meek; loathing’
Ghe oqpʱ‑ə̄ /É”ÉąÊ±bÊ±ÉŻË/ ‘meek’

The MLem meaning says a lot about how the Lemizh felt about the Gheans.

Ă c.

to annoy someone-dat

Etymology

NLem oc‑a
LMLem ĂČc‑a
MLem ooc‑a
Ghe ƍshˡ‑a /oːʒa/ ‘ask’

acRĂ d.

to do duty as an admiral, general

acRĂšd. admiral, general

Usage notes

Based on the idea that officers are not always promoted for their capability, acRùd. has been used to refer to people of other professions who are promoted for dubious reasons since Early New Lemizh (and probably earlier, behind closed doors). Contrast oshùc. ‘sergeant’.

Etymology

NLem acoRd‑a
LMLem Ă cĂČRdd‑ar
MLem aacouRdd‑ar
Ghe āshˇoəxᮛᮛˇ‑ā /ʌːʒɔ͜əʁdÌ d̠ʌː/

Ă zw.

to make erratic, random

Usage notes

This word is a common compound modifier, as exemplified by xacgàzw. ‘shine erratically = twinkle’ and RacjÌzw. ‘erratically coloured = speckled’.

Etymology

NLem eRwR‑a
LMLem, MLem eRwR‑yr
Ghe exfxˇ‑ə̄ /ɛʁÎČÊÉŻË/

Ă v.

to feed someone-dat with something-acc;
self-receiving: to eat something-acc, to feed on something-acc

ilvnĂ . to vomit

Ă v djĂšRtaR. to have breakfast
Ă v djĂŹRtaR. to have dinner

Usage notes

While being the standard word for eating, àv. has a tendency to mean ‘gobble, eat noisily’. Avoid it when talking, for example, about a state banquet; àqsk. is better suited for that purpose. Unless of course you want to say what the banquet was really like.

Etymology

NLem, LMLem, MLem ev‑a
OLem hedh‑
PLem *hedh‑, Narten present of
PIE *h₁ed‑

doublet of Ă vd., Ă qt. and vnĂ t.

Cognates

Eng eat, Lat edƍ ‘eat’

Ă vd.

to host someone-dat

Ăšvd. a host
ĂŹvd. a guest

ivdmlĂŹ. Pleiades (see appendix, Constellations)

Usage notes

The nominal form, ‘a host’, has been used for highly favourable circumstances and natural forces (e.g. ‘This weather is a host for our weekend trip’), especially those bringing material wellbeing (e.g. ‘The invention of the bicycle proved a host for Î€Î·Î»áœłÎŒÎ±Ï‡ÎżÏ‚ and his family, but he died poor nonetheless’), since Proto-Lemizh. In modern usage, the inner nominative fills this role.

Etymology

NLem evdj‑a
LMLem, MLem eqdj‑ar
OLem hethdj‑
PLem *hethdj‑
PIE *h₁éd‑ti‑s ‘banquet’, abstract noun of
  PIE *h₁ed‑ ‘eat’

doublet of Ă v., Ă qt. and vnĂ t.

Cognates

Eng eat, Lat edƍ ‘eat’

Ă w.

to make ants

Etymology

NLem Ow‑a
LMLem, MLem Ow‑yr
Ghe öfËĄâ€‘É™Ì„ /ƓÎČɯː/

Ă wd.

to make tables; to lay a table

Usage notes

Ìwd. can not only mean a table, but also a laid table; hence the secondary meaning of the verb, which is attested from Late Middle Lemizh. See also àh. ‘make a bed’.

In metonymical use denoting a group of people sitting at a table, this word is negatively connotated: eá Ìwde. ‘The table laughed [derisively]’.

Etymology

NLem ewd‑a
LMLem ùbd‑yr
MLem eObd‑yr
Ghe eöp᎛ʱ‑ə̄ /ɛ͜ƓbʱdÌ Ê±ÉŻË/

Ă wb.

to speak or act frankly, bluntly

Etymology

NLem ombr‑a
LMLem ĂČmbr‑yr
Koi ᜌΌÎČÏâ€‘ÎżÎč ‘Umbri (Sabellic tribe)’, of unknown origin

The Umbri had a reputation of being very direct.

Ă x.

to make male(s), to make men (males; symbol: Å)

Etymology

NLem axr‑a
LMLem, MLem axr‑yr
OLem axr‑
PLem *axr‑, unclear derivation of
  PLem *xner‑ ‘man’
PIE *h₂nĂ©r‑s

Cognates

Gk áŒ€ÎœÎźÏ ‘man’, Ir neart ‘strength’

axileĂ s.

to make Achilles (a hero of the Troyan War)

Etymology

academic loan of
Koi ገχÎčλλΔ᜻‑ς, probably meaning ‘grief of the people’

Ă xk.

djUtÌxk. Mercurian day, the Lemizh equivalent of Wednesday (symbol: Á; see appendix, Date)

Usage notes

The planet Mercury, as well as the god, is called OnkrÌt. in Modern Lemizh.

Etymology

NLem Onkr‑a
LMLem Ònkyrt‑ar ‘Lone Runner (the God of trade)’
MLem OOnkyrt‑ar
OLem hönkyrt‑
PLem *hƍn‑kars‑, compound of
  PLem *hƍn‑ ‘single, alone’
PIE *h₁óiÌŻâ€‘n‑os ‘one, single’, adjectival form of
  PIE *h₁eiÌŻ ‘he, she, it’
 —and—
  PLem *kars‑ ‘run’, root present of
PIE *k̑ers‑

The sound shift from stem-final *s to t in OLem is unexplained; this development is only expected in verbs and adjectives, not in nouns.

Cognates

Eng one; Gk áŒ˜Ï€ÎŻâ€‘ÎșÎżÏ…ÏÎżÏ‚ (Epicurus) ‘ally’ (lit. ‘one running with [someone]’), Lat currƍ ‘run’

Ă xt.

to make pine trees

Etymology

reanalysis of
  ModLem uxtxoĂ ., gender change of
NLem uxtsoux‑a ‘pine’
Besk uxtsĂ„ux /h‑/
PCelt *φuxtāk‑ā
PIE *pĂ©uÌŻk̑‑eh₂

This is one of many Beskidic tree names introduced in the TlöngĂ¶Ì€l. The gender change in ModLem to a ‘female’ (zero) poststem is almost universal in trees; but this word was subsequently reanalysed as uxt-xoÌ. ⇐ ⇔ Ă xt xoĂ u. based on the myth that pine trees grew from landslides.

Cognates

Gk πΔύÎșη ‘pine’, Lit puĆĄĂŹs ‘pine’

Ă xh.

to (make/tell a) joke to someone-dat

Etymology

NLem oxh‑a
LMLem, MLem oxh‑yr
Ghe oxsh‑ə̄ /É”Ï‡ÊƒÉŻË/ ‘son’

There was a son of a Ghean lord who behaved in such a stupid way that the Ghean word for ‘son’ came to mean ‘joke’ to the Lemizh.

Ă h.

to make (produce or tidy) beds

Usage notes

In analogy to àwd. ‘make/lay tables’, Ìh. can also mean a made bed, and àh. can refer to either producing or tidying up a bed.

Etymology

NLem ahr‑a
LMLem, MLem ahr‑yr
Ghe ashpÊłâ€‘É™Ì„ /arÌ Ì„Ê™ÉŻË/

Ă hp.

to make salty, to give a salty taste to something-dat

Ăšhp. sodium (symbol: Αλ)

Usage notes

This word refers to the taste, as opposed to the substance salt. hlà. ‘make salt’ is used for the latter purpose.

Etymology

NLem yhph‑a
LMLem, MLem yhph‑yr
Ghe əshpshâżâ€‘É™Ì„ /əʃpÊƒÉŻË/

Ă hw.

to make horses (also chess knights; and also the constellation Pegasus; see appendix, Constellations)

Usage notes

Since Middle Lemizh times this word emphasises the nobility the Lemizh have traditionally seen in this animal; i.e. it connotes ‘steed’ rather than ‘nag’.

Calling a human a horse is praise for doing good, in a steady way, maybe even stubbornly.

Etymology

NLem ehw‑a
LMLem, MLem ehw‑yr
OLem heshw‑
PLem *heshw‑
PIE *h₁ék̑uÌŻâ€‘os

doublet of ehwĂ . and xikĂ .

Cognates

Lat equus ‘horse’, Gk áŒ”Ï€Ï€ÎżÏ‚ ‘horse’

Ă hs.

to make thirteen individuals

Etymology

NLem yhs‑a
LMLem, MLem yhs‑yl
Ghe əshs‑ə̄ /əʃsÌŸÉŻË/

Ă st.

to make the most, to make the largest amount (often with partitive; often compounded; see unit 11, Verbs of comparison and Superlative)

Usage notes

The absence of causes for most things has been a common theme in Lemizh literature and other arts since Late Middle Lemizh times, well before quantum physics was devloped. Compare tĂ cd..

Etymology

NLem, LMLem ist‑a
MLem istu‑a, back formation of
OLem superlative suffix ‑istu‑
PLem *‑isto‑
PIE *‑isto‑s

Cognates

Eng superlative suffix ‑est, probably fir‑st

astekĂ .

to make South American

astekĂ r. South America

Etymology

NLem astek‑a
Nah aztēcatl ‘Aztec’

The Batavian cartographer who first labelled South America as ΑζτηÎșΔΜ had never been overseas himself.

See darawà. for some information on continents’ names.

Ă sw.

to enjoy something-acc/dat

Usage notes

This word usually refers to enthusiastic and thorough enjoyment.

Etymology

NLem, LMLem, MLem usw‑a
OLem husw‑ ‘enjoyable’
PLem *husw‑, u-stem adjective of
PIE *h₁uÌŻes‑ ‘good’

Cognates

Ved vásu- ‘good, magnificent’, OCS veselƭ ‘merry’

Ă sh.

to read (about) something-acc to someone-dat;
or agentive ins: something-nom about something-acc to someone-dat (see unit 14, Objects related to language)

Etymology

NLem, LMLem, MLem Osh‑a
Ghe össhⁿ‑a /Ɠs̟ʃa/

Ă qt.

to make sweetmeats, candies

Etymology

NLem eqt‑a
LMLem, MLem eqt‑yr
OLem etht‑ ‘want (something edible) > sweetmeat’
PLem *eths‑ ‘want (something edible)’, s-desiderative of
PIE *h₁ed‑ ‘eat’

doublet of Ă v., Ă vd. and vnĂ t.

Cognates

Eng eat, Lat edƍ ‘eat’

Ă qsk.

to feed someone-dat (daintily) with something-acc;
self-receiving: to eat something-acc (daintily)

Usage notes

The standard word for eating is àv., which however has a tendency to mean ‘gobble, eat noisily’. Use àqsk. when this is undesirable.

Etymology

contamination of
NLem, LMLem, MLem isk‑a
Ghe isq‑a /ÉȘs̟qa/
 —with—
NLem, LMLem, MLem ev‑a
OLem hedh‑
PLem *hedh‑, Narten present of
PIE *h₁ed‑

Ă f.

to make points / an area up(wards), above (of) something-nom (see unit 12, Temporal and spatial verbs)

Etymology

NLem uf‑a, inflected form of
LMLem, MLem uf ‘above’
OLem uf, shortened form of
PLem *ufer
PIE *uper

Cognates

Eng over, Gk ᜑπέρ ‘above, over’

Ă fx.

to make dense, to condense

Etymology

NLem ef‑xp‑a, clarifying compound of
  NLem ef‑a
LMLem ef‑yr
MLem efi‑yr, nominalisation of
OLem hefi ‘upon, near’
PLem *hefi
PIE *h₁epi
 —and—
  NLem xp‑a ‘5/6’
LMLem, MLem xp‑yr
Ghe xp‑ə̄ /χpɯː/

Cognates

Gk áŒÏ€ÎŻ ‘upon, near’

eĂ .

to laugh; to laugh (aloud) at someone-dat/psu

Usage notes

With a dat object, this word merely means ‘address one’s laughter at someone’, and the psu of course names the reason for laughing. Neither necessarily expresses derision.

Etymology

NLem e‑a
LMLem ù‑a
MLem ee‑a, verbalisation of
OLem hē! ‘ha!’
PLem *hā!
PIE *h₁eh₂!

doublet of ejlĂ .

Cognates

Eng (and many other languages) ha! (laughter)

eĂ fs.

to make uranium (symbol: ΕÎč)

Etymology

NLem eafst‑a
LMLem ùàfst‑yr
MLem eiayfst‑yr ‘uranium, pitchblende (?)’
Ghe eiaəfst‑ə̄ /ɛ͜ÉȘa͜əɾs̟tɯː/

elefĂ .

to make elephants (also the constellation corresponding to Pictor and Volans and parts of Puppis, Carina and Dorado; see appendix, Constellations)

Etymology

NLem elefa‑a, academic loan of
Koi áŒÎ»áœłÏ†áŸ±â€‘Ï‚
SHell *elĂ©phan‑s, probably from an Afro-Asiatic language

Cognates

Eng elephant

entĂ w.

to make insects

Etymology

NLem entom‑a, academic loan of
Koi áŒ”ÎœÏ„ÎżÎŒâ€‘ÎżÎœ
SHell *Ă©n‑tom‑on, nominalisation, compound of
  SHell *en ‘in’
PIE *h₁en
 —and—
  SHell *tmÌ„n‑ƍ ‘cut’, nasal-infix present of
PIE *temh₁‑

see also marnĂ .

Cognates

Eng in; Eng contempt (via Lat con‑temnƍ ‘despise’)
Eng insect comes from the Lat calque of Gk áŒ”ÎœÏ„ÎżÎŒÎżÎœ.

emblĂ .

to make a force unit, a force of 40.30 millinewtons (see appendix, Units of measurement)

Etymology

NLem embol‑a, academic loan of
Koi ጐΌÎČÎżÎ»â€‘áœ” ‘thrust, battering ram’, nominalisation of
  Koi ጐΌÎČᜱλλ‑ω ‘throw in’
SHell *en‑q̌l̄́l‑ƍ, compound of
  SHell *en ‘in’
PIE *h₁en
 —and—
  SHell *q̌l̄́l‑ƍ ‘throw’, nasal-infix present of
PIE *gʷelh₁‑ ‘hit, throw’

Actually, this is a very low force for a battering ram.

Cognates

Eng embolism, ballistic (via Gk ÎČÎŹÎ»Î»Ï‰ ‘throw’)

edĂ .

to make sheep (also the constellation Aries; see appendix, Constellations)

Usage notes

Sheep are traditionally seen to be stupid, in contrast to the intelligent goats (ysrÌ.). Unsurprisingly, calling someone a sheep is an insult.

Etymology

NLem ed‑a
LMLem ùd‑yr
MLem eid‑yr
Ghe ei᎛ʱ‑ə̄ /ɛ͜ÉȘdÌ Ê±ÉŻË/

etxĂ t.

to make silver (symbol: Αρ)

Usage notes

The word is used metonymically for metal-made works of art such as figurines or tableware, even if they are not made of silver.

Etymology

NLem etsat‑a
LMLem, MLem etst‑yr
Ghe ets᎛‑ə̄ /ɛts̟tÌ ÉŻË/

epikurĂ s.

to make Epicurus (an Ancient Greek philosopher)

Etymology

academic loan of
Koi ጘπ᜷ÎșÎżÏ…Ïâ€‘ÎżÏ‚, meaning ‘ally’

ejlĂ .

to smile at someone-dat

Etymology

NLem ejl‑a
LMLem ùxel‑a
MLem ee‑xel‑a, diminutive of
  MLem ee‑a ‘laugh’, verbalisation of
OLem hē ‘ha!’
PLem *hā
PIE *h₁eh₂

doublet of eĂ .

Cognates

Eng (and many other languages) ha! (laughter)

ehwĂ .

to make unicorns

Etymology

NLem ehw‑a ‘horse’
LMLem, MLem ehw‑yr
OLem heshw‑
PLem *heshw‑
PIE *h₁ék̑uÌŻâ€‘os

This word replaced the bahuvrihi NLem karxn‑r‑U lit. ‘one-horn’; the regular ModLem outcome would have been homophonic with kÌcx. ‘horn’.

doublet of Ă hw. and xikĂ .

Cognates

Lat equus ‘horse’, Gk áŒ”Ï€Ï€ÎżÏ‚ ‘horse’

esfĂ s.

to hide something-acc, or self-transporting: somewhere-dat etc. (perfect: describing the state, otherwise the action)

Usage notes

In literal use, this verb is only for hiding things or people (including oneself), not for facts or feelings. This was different in Middle Lemizh. — But the phrase esfàs màski. ‘hide [oneself] behind [one’s] wit’ refers to glossing over one’s intentions or feelings by witty talk.

Etymology

poststem from perfect of
NLem esf‑a
LMLem ùsf‑a
MLem eisf‑a
Ghe eisf‑a /ɛ͜ÉȘsÌŸÉža/

eqinĂ .

to make Ethiynic

eqinĂ r. the federation of Ethiyn in northeastern Europe

Etymology

Eth EĂŸÄ«jnu, of unknown origin

ylĂ s.

to make futile, vain, to do something-acc in vain

Etymology

NLem ylas‑a
Besk iƂas /h‑/, of unknown origin

yglĂ j.

agentive dat: to look at something-nom, at the image of something-acc with spectacles/glasses

yglĂčj. spectacles, glasses

Etymology

poststem from plural of
NLem ydl‑a ‘lens’
LMLem, MLem ydl‑ar
Ghe ətˡ‑ā /ədËĄÊŒË/ ‘igniter, lens’, nominalisation of
  Ghe ətˡ‑a /ədËĄa/ ‘burn’

doublet of yglĂ c.

yglĂ c.

(archaic) agentive dat: to look at something-nom, at the image of something-acc with a monocle

yglĂčc. monocle

Etymology

poststem from singular of
NLem ydl‑a ‘lens’
LMLem, MLem ydl‑ar
Ghe ətˡ‑ā /ədËĄÊŒË/ ‘igniter, lens’, nominalisation of
  Ghe ətˡ‑a /ədËĄa/ ‘burn’

doublet of yglĂ j.

ytĂ s.

to make an electric inductance unit, an inductance of 1.940 henries (see appendix, Units of measurement)

Etymology

allegedly academic loan of the name of some ጜττÎčς, a moor where giants were supposed to dwell; to match the capacitance unit and the large value of this unit

The spelling with y was adopted because this was one of the few letters still available for unit symbols.

ytxĂ .

to serve someone-dat, to work as a servant for someone-dat

Etymology

NLem yts‑a
LMLem Ìts‑ar
MLem yyts‑ar ‘flatterer’, agent noun of
Ghe əə᎛ ̑‑ə̄ /É™ËÉ—Ì ÉŻË/ ‘good’

See fĂ ph. for a similar semantic development.

ytfĂ .

to make (it) night(time)

ytfĂšR. evening
ytfĂŹR. morning

Usage notes

As the counterpart of the ‘male’ day, the word for the night kept its ‘female’ (i.e. zero) poststem.

Etymology

NLem ytf‑a
LMLem, MLem ytf‑yr
Ghe əᮛf‑ə̄ /ətÌ ÉžÉŻË/

yphĂ .

to make (colour) orange

yphilkĂ . to make (colour) cerulean (blue-green, a colour between blue and cyan/turquoise)

Usage notes

While the Gheans applied the term əpshqâżÉ™Ì„ only to a specific hue of orange, which they despised, the range of meaning was somewhat widened in Early New Lemizh. Modern Lemizh views the complete range between red and yellow as yphÌ.; and any negative connotations are obsolete.

Being the only ‘female’ of the basic colour words (see the etymology section), orange is perceived as overwhelmingly girly.

Etymology

gender change of
NLem yphakn‑a
LMLem, MLem yphkn‑yr
Ghe əpshqâżâ€‘É™Ì„ /əpʃqⁿɯː/

Gender change was caused by simplification of yphilk-kÌ. ‘cerulean’ to yphil-kÌ..

ypsĂ p.

to make bellies

Etymology

NLem ypsap‑a
LMLem Ìpsp‑yr
MLem yapsp‑yr
Ghe əapsp‑ə̄ /ə͜aps̟pɯː/

ycvĂ .

to change the subject to something seen as more important by the speaker; to say something-acc to someone-dat, changing the subject (see pragmatics page III, Utterance modifiers: Verbs of communication)

Etymology

NLem ycv‑a
LMLem, MLem ycwc‑a ‘evade’
Ghe əshfshˡ‑a /əʒÎČʒa/ ‘answer’

yzĂ j.

to (com)press, squeeze something-dat into some shape-acc [e.g. flat]; to crush something-dat to something-acc [e.g. parts, dust];
dat: to contract; to crush to something-acc

Usage notes

The ‘deforming’ and ‘destroying’ meanings are distinguished by the acc object or – often simpler – by instead using a nominal verb expressing a shape, versus nominal verbs such as skràp. ‘split, turn into parts’, cnàxw. ‘turn into dust’, etc.

Etymology

poststem from plural of
NLem, LMLem, MLem yz‑a ‘crush’
Ghe əsˇ‑a /əz̟a/

The ‘plural’ poststem probably stems from the fact that crushing results in multiple fragments; the ‘deforming’ meaning is relatively young.

yhĂ .

to mow/cut something-dat with a scythe

yhĂč. scythe

Etymology

NLem yh‑a
LMLem, MLem yhh‑a ‘mow (with a scythe or sickle)’
Ghe əshshⁿ‑a /əʃʃa/, an onomatopoeia

doublet of yhlĂ gz.

yhlĂ gz.

to mow/cut something-dat with a sickle

yhlĂčgz. sickle; also the constellation Norma (see appendix, Constellations)

Etymology

NLem yh‑algz‑a, compound of
  NLem yh‑a ‘scythe’
LMLem, MLem yhh‑a ‘mow (with a scythe or sickle)’
Ghe əshshⁿ‑a /əʃʃa/, an onomatopoeia
 —and—
  NLem algz‑a ‘little, dear’ [term of endearment]
LMLem, MLem algjw‑yr
OLem algghw‑
PLem *algghw‑, u-stem adjective of
PIE *legʰ‑ ‘slight, small, light’

doublet of yhĂ .

Cognates

Lat levis ‘light, quick, trifling’

ysrĂ .

to make goats

Usage notes

Goats are known for their intelligence. To compliment someone on an intelligent thought or act, you can say sklág viì ysrÌy. ‘You proved [to be] a goat’ or simply ysrá vìi. ‘You [actively] turned into a goat, you made yourself a goat’. These idioms are attested from Early New Lemizh, although the association must have existed earlier: the modern word for ‘intelligent’ is actually derived from the native MLem name for goats. — Compare edÌ. ‘sheep’.

Etymology

NLem ysr‑a
LMLem Ìassr‑yr
MLem yyassr‑yr
Ghe ə̄asspÊłâ€‘É™Ì„ /ɯː͜arÌ„rÌ„Ê™ÉŻË/

iĂ .

to love someone-acc/dat

Etymology

NLem i‑a
LMLem ì‑a
MLem ii‑a ‘ask for, strive’
OLem ī‑
PLem *ī‑, root present of
PIE *iÌŻeh₂‑

Cognates

Ved yā́mi ‘ask for’, Gk Ύ᜷ζηΌαÎč ‘seek’

iotĂ .

to make an energy unit, an energy of 3.708 millijoules (see appendix, Units of measurement)

nÌ iotĂŹly. not the slightest amount, lit. ‘not a iotỳ’

Etymology

NLem iote‑a, academic loan of
Koi ጰáœčτη‑ς ‘wish’, of unknown origin

The idea behind this unit is that the (potential, kinetic, etc.) energy contained in an object represents its ‘wish’ to perform work.

The phrase ‘not a iotỳ’ comes from the fact that this is a pretty small unit of energy.

igcĂ d.

to lead someone-dat (as a master)

igcùd. master; Lord (title of the monotheistic deity; see also jfùxw. ‘Devil’)

Usage notes

This term is used for higher ranks in a hierarchy than nĂ d., and/or more formally. Adherents of monotheism reserve it as a title for their god. (Funnily, the word can be traced to the Gheans, who had an atheistic religion.)

In the last few centuries, the word has also denoted, pars pro toto, a master’s family. This use, however, is on the decline.

Etymology

NLem igjadl‑a
LMLem, MLem igjdl‑ar ‘lord’
Ghe iqᮛˡ‑ā /ÉȘɹˠdÌ ËĄÊŒË/

doublet of igcĂ ks.

igcĂ ks.

to say ‘lawks!’; lawks!

Etymology

dialectal form of
  ModLem igcĂ d. ‘Lord’
NLem igjadl‑a
LMLem, MLem igjdl‑ar ‘lord’
Ghe iqᮛˡ‑ā /ÉȘɹˠdÌ ËĄÊŒË/

doublet of igcĂ d.

itrĂ h.

to make nickel (symbol: Ιτ)

Etymology

NLem itarh‑a
LMLem ìtàrh‑yr
MLem iitayrh‑yr ‘nickel (mineral?)’
Ghe Ä«taəpshÊłâ€‘É™Ì„ /iːta͜əʙrÌ Ì„ÉŻË/

ihkĂ .

to shine at something-dat (only of the Moon)

ihkù. Moon; Luna, Selene (goddess) (symbol: É)
ihkÌ. moonlight, moonshine; moonbeam

ihkyrÌ. moonbeam

Usage notes

See the word for the Sun, and see djeipysrĂ d. for some information on Lemizh polytheism.

Etymology

NLem ihk‑a
LMLem, MLem ihk‑ar
Ghe ishq‑ə̄ /ÉȘʃqɯː/

oĂ .

to make poems about something-dat (or as a sibling acc object in certain constructions that have ‘poem’ in the fact; see unit 14, Objects related to language)

Etymology

gender change of
NLem ous‑a
Besk Ă„us /h‑/
PCelt *wā́t‑os, of unknown origin

oĂ s.

to make an electric charge or dielectric flux unit, a charge or flux of 57.64 millicoulombs (see appendix, Units of measurement)

Etymology

academic loan of
Koi ÎżáŒ¶â€‘Ï‚ ‘sheep’
SHell *ówi‑s
PIE *h₂óuÌŻi‑s

A way of creating static electricity is to rub amber against sheep’s wool. As e (for Koi ጀλΔÎșÏ„ÏÎżÎœ ‘amber’) was already used as the symbol for the force unit, it was decided to name the charge unit for the sheep.

See also OĂ s..

Cognates

Eng ewe, Lat ovis ‘sheep’

oRwxĂ f.

to make poodles (also the constellation Canis Major; see appendix, Constellations)

Poodles make a sound rather like this.

Etymology

NLem oRw‑xaf‑a, compound of
  NLem oRw‑a ‘hound’
LMLem, MLem oRw‑yr
Ghe oxfˇ‑ə̄ /ɔʁÎČɯː/ ‘dog’, an onomatopoeia
 —and—
  NLem xaf‑a ‘water’
LMLem, MLem xaf‑yr
OLem xaf‑ ‘water, stream’
PLem *xaf‑ ‘water’ [animate], ‘stream’
PIE *hâ‚‚Ă©p‑s

The poodle is named ‘water-hound’ for its qualities in waterfowl hunting. (Compare the English name, which is related to puddle.)

Cognates

Ved ā́p ‘water’, Ir abhainn ‘river’

oranutnĂ .

to make orangutans

Etymology

NLem oranutan‑a
Mal orang hutan, lit. ‘forest person’

It is not clear whether orang hutan referred to the ape, or whether this was a misunderstanding between Europeans and Malays. The term might actually have meant ‘forest people’ or ‘librarians’ (i.e. ‘free people’).

Cognates

Eng orangutan

omĂ .

to make eleven individuals

Usage notes

The number eleven is associated with a sense of ‘too much, more than one’s fill’, as seen in such phrases as omà. ‘make eleven = do more than really necessary’ or làxt omÌy. ‘want eleven = want more than one’s share’. This is often thought to be a remnant of the old decimal system (11 = more than 10), but has only been attested by Late Middle Lemizh times, about 700 years after the adoption of the Ghean hexadecimal numbers.

Etymology

NLem om‑a
LMLem ĂČm‑yl
MLem oum‑yl
Ghe oəfʱ‑ə̄ /ɔ͜əmɯː/

doublet of omĂ j.

omĂ j.

to do duty / act as a councillor

omĂšj. councillor

Etymology

poststem from plural of
NLem om‑a ‘eleven’
LMLem ĂČm‑yl
MLem oum‑yl
Ghe oəfʱ‑ə̄ /ɔ͜əmɯː/

The term comes from the fact that the Lemizh monarchy historically had 11 councillors (as well as 15 ministers).

doublet of omĂ .

odnĂ .

to make (it) afternoon

odnykÌ. the second half of the night

Usage notes

See atxĂ p..

Etymology

NLem odn‑a
LMLem ĂČdnm‑yr
MLem oadnm‑yr
Ghe oaᮛsfʱ‑ə̄ /ɔ͜ad̠ʱnmɯː/

ohrĂ .

to pay tax(es) to someone-dat;
dat: to tax someone-nom

Etymology

NLem ohr‑a
LMLem, MLem ohr‑yr
Ghe oshÊłâ€‘É™Ì„ /ɔrÌ Ì„ÉŻË/

oshĂ c.

to do duty as a sergeant

oshĂšc. sergeant

Usage notes

Sergeants have a reputation of being singularly competent, and calling someone a sergeant is a compliment to this effect: oshác vìe. is attested from Early New Lemizh. Contrast acRùd. ‘admiral, general’.

Etymology

poststem from singular of
NLem osh‑a
LMLem ĂČyshs‑ar
MLem oayshs‑ar
Ghe oaəsshs‑ā /ɔa͜əs̟ʃs̟ʌː/

OĂ s.

to make a magnetic charge or flux unit, a charge/flux of 84.82 milliwebers (see appendix, Units of measurement)

Etymology

named in analogy to the electric charge / dielectric flux unit oĂ s.

OlwĂ .

to wipe something-dat

Etymology

NLem Olw‑a
LMLem Ò‑lufw‑a, clarifying compound of
  LMLem Ò‑a
MLem OU‑a
Ghe öifsh ̑‑a /Ɠ͜ÉȘa/
 —and—
  LMLem, MLem lufw‑yr ‘clean’
OLem lufw‑
PLem *lufw‑, u-stem adjective of
PIE *leuÌŻh₃‑ ‘wash’

Cognates

Eng lye, Lat lavƍ ‘wash’

OnkrĂ t.

to make the god or the planet Mercury/Hermes (symbol: Á)

Usage notes

See djeipysrĂ d. for some information on Lemizh polytheism, and Ă xk. for the weekday associated with this god.

Etymology

NLem Onkyrt‑a, academic loan of
OLem hönkyrt‑ ‘Lone Runner (the God of trade)’
PLem *hƍn‑kars‑, compound of
  PLem *hƍn‑ ‘single, alone’
PIE *h₁óiÌŻâ€‘n‑os ‘one, single’, adjectival form of
  PIE *h₁eiÌŻ ‘he, she, it’
 —and—
  PLem *kars‑ ‘run’, root present of
PIE *k̑ers‑

The sound shift from stem-final *s to t in OLem is unexplained; this development is only expected in verbs and adjectives, not in nouns.

Cognates

Eng one; Gk áŒ˜Ï€ÎŻâ€‘ÎșÎżÏ…ÏÎżÏ‚ (Epicurus) ‘ally’ (lit. ‘one running with [someone]’), Lat currƍ ‘run’

OglĂ c.

to make moles (animals)

Usage notes

Originally referring to the European mole, Talpa europaea, the word is now used for species from other world regions as well.

Etymology

poststem from singular of
NLem Odl‑a
LMLem Òdl‑ar, nominalisation of
MLem OUdl‑a ‘dig’
Ghe öitˡ‑a /Ɠ͜ÉȘdËĄa/

The singular poststem is based on the assumption that moles are solitary animals.

This word replaced MLem dzingswivyr ‘mole; mole hill’, lit. ‘earth thrower’ (a cognate of the first component of djingmesrà. and of swàv.).

OtĂ .

to make a (solar) year (see appendix, Date and Units of measurement for usage)

OtĂČR. New Year

OteihkÌ. lunar year (⇐ ⇔ OtÌ ihkùe. ‘a year made by the Moon’; see appendix, Moon calendar)

Usage notes

The New Year is celebrated extensively and lushly by the Lemizh. This was different during Old and Middle Lemizh times, when the turn of the year was a rather prosaic matter.

Etymology

NLem Ot‑a
LMLem Òytkt‑yr ‘year’
MLem OOytkt‑yr ‘saros (a time span of about 18 years)’
Ghe ȫətq᎛‑ə̄ /þː͜ətqtÌ ÉŻË/

The meaning in LMLem is somewhat unclear, as jixar‑yr also seems to have meant ‘year’. It is possible that one of the two words was used for the Ghean lunar year and one for the native solar year.

udreĂ .

to make an electric displacement unit, a displacement of 6.807 coulombs per square metre (see appendix, Units of measurement)

Etymology

named in analogy to the magnetic flux density unit UdreĂ ., following the example of oĂ s. and OĂ s.

ujrĂ .

to roar at someone-dat

Etymology

NLem, LMLem, MLem ujr‑a, an onomatopoeia

usrĂ .

to make the goddess or the planet Venus/Aphrodite (symbol: Â)

Usage notes

See djeipysrĂ d. for some information on Lemizh polytheism, and xsrĂ . for the weekday associated with this goddess.

Etymology

NLem usor‑a, academic loan of
OLem huhsor‑ ‘Lady Love’
PLem *huh‑sor‑, feminine of
  PLem *huh‑ ‘be comfortable with, love’, root aorist of
PIE *h₁euÌŻk‑ ‘get used to, learn’

Cognates

Ved ucyasi ‘[you] are used to’; the PLem feminine suffix is related to the second components of Eng sister and probably Lat uxor ‘wife’

UdreĂ .

to make a magnetic flux density unit, a flux density of 10.02 teslas (see appendix, Units of measurement)

Etymology

shortened form, academic loan of
Koi ᜑΎρΔ᜷‑៱ ‘irrigation, water supply’, abstract noun of
  Koi ᜕Ύωρ ‘water’, contamination from plural, ‘voiceless’ initial of
SHell *wĂłdrÌ„
PIE *uÌŻĂłdrÌ„ ‘water’ [inanimate], deverbal noun of
  PIE *uÌŻed‑ ‘well, gush’

Like most electromagnetic units, UdreĂ . uses the electricity is water metaphor. Physicists were running out of letters for unit symbols, which explains the omission of initial x that would be expected here.

See also udreĂ ..

lĂ .

to do something-fact, to act;
fact: to happen

lĂš. source, sender; other case descriptors analogous
lÙr. (mathematics) dimension

Etymology

NLem, LMLem, MLem l‑a
Ghe ᮛˡ‑a /dÌ ËĄa/

lanĂ .

to make elms

Etymology

NLem lain‑a
Besk laiƄ
PCelt *lim‑os
PIE *h₁élem ‘mountain elm’

This is one of many Beskidic tree names introduced in the TlöngĂ¶Ì€l. ‘Female’ (zero) poststems are almost universal in trees.

Cognates

Eng elm, Ir leamhán ‘elm’

lanĂ g.

to make dragonflies, damselflies

Etymology

NLem lanagmr‑a
LMLem, MLem langmr‑yr ‘dragonfly’
OLem hlangmr‑
PLem *hlangmr‑, nominalisation, r-stem adjective of
PIE *h₁lengʷʰ‑ ‘move effortlessly’

Cognates

Ger ge−lingen ‘succeed’, Ved rĂĄm̆̇hate ‘run’

lĂ g.

agentive ins: to calculate something-dat to give some result-acc (see unit 7, Mathematical functions)

Etymology

NLem, LMLem, MLem alg‑a
OLem alg‑ ‘count, calculate’
PLem *alg‑, root present of
PIE *leg̑‑ ‘gather’

Cognates

Lat legƍ ‘gather, read’, Alb mbledh ‘gather’; neither related to Eng algebra nor to Gk áŒ„Î»ÎłÎżÏ‚ ‘pain’

lĂ gc.

self-receiving, mainly dat: to go to rest, perfect: to rest;
agentive caus or nom: to put someone-dat to rest

Usage notes

Going to rest usually implies lying down (unless of course you are a parrot); but to primarily express the change of orientation as opposed to the goal of resting, we use constructions with spatial verbs (see unit 12, Orientation).

Etymology

NLem, LMLem, MLem algj‑a ‘lay’
OLem alggh‑ ‘lie’
PLem *alggh‑, root aorist of
PIE *legʰ‑ ‘lie down’

Cognates

Eng lie (position), Ir luigh ‘lie’

lĂ gz.

to belittle someone-dat, to make dear;
(mathematics) agentive ins: to calculate the reciprocal of some value-dat to give some result-acc (see unit 7, Fractions)

Usage notes

This is a term of endearment and somewhat patronising.

Etymology

NLem algz‑a
LMLem, MLem algjw‑yr
OLem algghw‑
PLem *algghw‑, u-stem adjective of
PIE *legʰ‑ ‘slight, small, light’

Cognates

Lat levis ‘light, quick, trifling’, possibly Eng light (not heavy)

lĂ b.

to make flowers (small, herbaceous flowering plants)

Usage notes

lùb. ‘one producing flowers’ and lìb. ‘one turned into a flower’ are popular pet names for girls because of the phonetical similarity with lùwb., lìwb. ‘girlfriend’.

Etymology

NLem leb‑a
LMLem lùb‑ar
MLem leeb‑ar ‘flower(ing plant)’
OLem lēb‑ ‘fascinate, charm’
PLem *lewb‑ ‘confuse’, Narten present of
PIE *leuÌŻbʰ‑ ‘love; infatuate, confuse’

doublet of lĂ wb.

Cognates

Eng love, Lat libet ‘it is pleasing’

labĂ t.

to make cars

Usage notes

These days, automobiles are mostly used in rural areas with insufficient infrastructure. When townspeople say labÌt., they typically refer to underground, tram or railroad cars.

Etymology

NLem labatl‑a
Mag Lábatlan ‘a northwest Magyarian town’, compound of
  Mag lĂĄb ‘leg’
 —and—
  Mag ‑atlan ‘-less’

The town of Lábatlan used to be famous for producing horse-drawn coaches. The omission of ‑n in the NLem loan might be due to a reanalysis as partitive case suffix, based on the idea that coaches were made in ‘Lábatlan, among other [towns]’.

lĂ bv.

to make white, to make a light/pale colour (as in ‘to go white’), to whiten, to brighten up (referring to colour, not to light intensity)

lilbvjnĂ . to make (pure) white
lilbvnà. to make black, to blacken (non-white, ‘passive’ black, as in ‘blackened by age, dark/black night’; compare wàcg.)

lybvnÌs. fluorine (symbol: Ω)

Etymology

NLem albw‑a
LMLem, MLem albw‑yr
OLem albw‑, dialect borrowing of
PLem *xalbw‑, o-stem adjective of
PIE *h₂elbʰ‑

Proto-Lemizh *xalbw‑ could also be a u-stem. The o-stem is assumed on semantic grounds.

Cognates

Eng elf, Lat albus ‘white’

lĂ k.

to throw something-acc somewhere-dat etc. (also non-sending);
self-transporting: to jump somewhere-dat etc.

Usage notes

Use swĂ v. to express a reckless or aggressive attitude for the throw or jump.

Etymology

NLem, LMLem, MLem lek‑a
OLem lek‑
PLem *lex‑ ‘move one’s limbs’, Narten present of
PIE *lek‑

Cognates

Lit lekiĂč ‘fly, run’

lĂ t.

to make heavy

Etymology

NLem alt‑a
LMLem, MLem alt‑yr
OLem alt‑
PLem *als‑ ‘gather, pick up’, root present of
PIE *les‑

Cognates

Ger lesen ‘gather, read’, Lit lesĂč ‘pick (up)’

lĂ j.

to make/build houses

— lynjù bÌnje. house and garden, one’s immovable property

Etymology

NLem, LMLem, MLem lingj‑a
OLem lingj‑
PLem *lingj‑ ‘house, hive’, back formation of
  PLem *melidhlingj‑ ‘beehive’
PIE *melidlĂ­g̑ʰ‑i‑eh₂ ‘bee’, nominalisation of
  PIE *mĂ©lid‑leiÌŻg̑ʰ‑ ‘lick honey’, compound of
  PIE *mĂ©lid ‘honey’
 —and—
  PIE *leiÌŻg̑ʰ‑ ‘lick’

doublet of melĂ s.

Cognates

Eng lick, Gk Î»Î”ÎŻÏ‡Ï‰ ‘lick’

lĂ jg.

to bend something-dat into some shape-acc [e.g. into a z]; to break something-dat into something-acc [e.g. into parts, in two] by bending;
dat: to bend; to break into something-acc by being bent

Usage notes

The ‘deforming’ and ‘destroying’ meanings are distinguished by the acc object or – often simpler – by instead using a nominal verb expressing a shape, versus nominal verbs such as skràp. ‘split, turn into parts’, dwà. ‘turn into two [parts]’, etc.

Etymology

NLem, LMLem, MLem lung‑a ‘break by bending’
OLem lung‑
PLem *lung‑, nasal-infix present of
PIE *leuÌŻg̑‑ or *leuÌŻg‑

Cognates

Eng lock

lĂ c.

to make lips

Etymology

NLem ler‑a
LMLem lùr‑yr
MLem leer‑yr
OLem lēr‑
PLem *lewor‑
PIE *lĂ©b‑or‑s, r-stem noun of
  PIE *leb‑ ‘hang down’

Cognates

Eng lip, Lat labium ‘lip’

lĂ cw.

to help someone-dat with something-acc

Usage notes

Since at least Late Middle Lemizh times, the use of this verbs includes all kind of professional help, such as from paramedics, firefighters, etc.

Etymology

NLem lorw‑a
LMLem alĂČrw‑yl
MLem al‑oerw‑yl ‘help’, lit. ‘foster for some amount of time, foster to some extent’, compound of
  MLem al‑a ‘nourish, foster’
OLem al‑
PLem *al‑, root present of
PIE *h₂el‑
 —and—
  MLem oerw‑yl ‘amount’
Ghe oeᮛpÊłâ€‘É™Ì„ /ɔ͜ɛrÌ Ê™ÉŻË/

Cognates

Eng ad‑olescent (via Lat ad‑olēscƍ ‘grow up’)

lĂ w.

to make lions (also the constellation Leo; see appendix, Constellations)

Etymology

NLem lew‑a
LMLem, MLem lew‑yr
OLem lew‑
SHell *leƩ‑on
PIE *lĂ©uÌŻâ€‘om

PIE *lĂ©uÌŻâ€‘om might be a borrowing from PSem *labiʟ‑ (compare Heb ŚœŚ‘Ś™Ś). Or it might be the other way round.

Cognates

Eng lion, Gk λέωΜ ‘lion’

lĂ wb.

to be one’s-dat boyfriend, girlfriend (partner in a romantic relationship); a romantic relationship

lĂšwb.(, lĂŹwb.) boyfriend, girlfriend

Usage notes

This word is typically used for unmarried couples, as we have the verb dwàc. ‘marry’ and its various inner cases for ‘marriage’ (cons) and ‘spouse’ (nom/dat). Using làwb. for a married couple focuses on their romantic love rather than on the institution of marriage.

Etymology

NLem lumb‑a
LMLem, MLem lumb‑yr
OLem lumb‑ ‘love’
PLem *lumb‑, zero-grade root stative of
PIE *leuÌŻbʰ‑ ‘love; infatuate, confuse’

doublet of lĂ b.

Cognates

Eng love, Lat libet ‘it is pleasing’

lĂ x.

to make glass

Etymology

NLem lex‑a
LMLem lùx‑ar, nominalisation of
MLem leex‑a ‘shine’
OLem lēh‑
PLem *lewh‑, Narten present of
PIE *leuÌŻk‑ ‘become bright, shine’

doublet of lĂ xh.

Cognates

Eng light, Lat lĆ«x ‘light’

lĂ xt.

want, wish something-acc [from someone-dat]; [someone-dat] to do something-acc (see unit 13, Overview of the modals)

Etymology

NLem, LMLem, MLem lint‑a ‘touch’
OLem lint‑
PLem *lint‑, nasal-infix present of
PIE *leiÌŻt‑

The modern meaning has developed from the notion ‘touch with one’s mind’. The similarity with dàxt. ‘must’ is pure coincidence.

Cognates

Gk λÎčÏ„áœłÏƒÎžÎ±Îč ‘beg, implore’

The word is said to mean ‘laugh [3rd person singular]’ (semantic development perhaps via ‘tickle’) in an obscure central European language, but this has never been confirmed.

lĂ xw.

to make green, to green

lilxwkĂ . to make (colour) magenta

lilxwkivnù. francium (symbol: Ωο) (⇐ vnù lilxwkìe. ‘making fire magenta’)
lixwgwlĂš. barium (symbol: Πρ) (⇐ gwlĂš lĂŹxwe. ‘making the blaze green’)

Etymology

NLem alxw‑a
LMLem, MLem alxw‑yr
OLem alxw‑
PLem *alxw‑, u-present of
PIE *leh₂‑ ‘pour, water’

In Proto-Lemizh the meaning is probably only ‘to green’ as a metonymy of ‘to water’. Cross-linguistically, many words for ‘green’ are derived from terms relating to plants and their growth.

Cognates

Lat lāma ‘puddle’, Hit lāhui ‘pour’

lĂ xh.

to make lynxes (also the constellation between our Aquarius and Cetus, unrelated to our constellation Lynx; see appendix, Constellations)

Etymology

NLem luxh‑a
LMLem, MLem luxsj‑yr
OLem luhsj‑
PLem *luhsj‑
PIE *lĂșk‑si‑s, i-stem noun of
  PIE *leuÌŻk‑ ‘become bright, shine’

doublet of lĂ x.

Cognates

Eng lynx (via Gk Î»ÏÎłÎŸ ‘lynx’), Lat lĆ«x ‘light’

lĂ q.

to make a mass unit, a mass of 761.1 grams (see appendix, Units of measurement)

Etymology

NLem liq‑a, academic loan of
Koi Î»áœ·Îžâ€‘ÎżÏ‚ ‘stone’, of uncertain origin

Obviously, the Lemizh have quite a different idea than the English of how heavy a stone should be.

Cognates

Eng litho-graphy

lĂ qk.

self-transporting: to race someone-dat/com, a race

Etymology

NLem, LMLem, MLem liqk‑a
OLem lithk‑
PLem *lithk‑, sk̑-present of
PIE *leiÌŻt‑ ‘go, move (away)’

Cognates

Eng lead, TochB lita ‘went (away)’

lĂ qx.

to make (it) summer

Usage notes

Technically, summer starts with the summer solstice (around 21st June in our calendar) and ends with the autumn equinox (around 23st September). In everyday parlance, however, the term is usually applied to the time spanning weeks 27 to 39 in the Lemizh Sun calendar, which starts and ends somewhat earlier.

Etymology

NLem leqx‑a
LMLem lùqx‑yr
MLem leeqx‑yr ‘warm part of the year’, contamination of
OLem lēth‑
PLem *lēth‑
PIE *leh₁t‑óm
 —with—
OLem lēh‑ ‘shine’
PLem *lewh‑, Narten present of
PIE *leuÌŻk‑ ‘become bright, shine’

Cognates

OCS lěto ‘summer, year’; Eng light

lĂ f.

to make skin, fruit’s peel, tree’s bark, bread’s crust, cheese’s rind

lUfdrÌ. tree’s bark (⇐ ⇔ lÌf drÌU.)
lUfwÌsp. bread’s crust
lUfxalÌ. apple’s peel
etc.

Etymology

NLem lufr‑a
LMLem, MLem lufr‑yr
OLem lufr‑
PLem *lufr‑, nominalisation, r-stem adjective of
PIE *leuÌŻp‑ ‘peel (off)’

Cognates

Lit lupĂč ‘peel (off)’

lemĂ c.

to make Lemizh

lemĂ rc. the country of Lemaria

Etymology

poststem from collective singular of
NLem lem‑a
LMLem lùmin‑yr
MLem leemin‑yr
OLem lēmin‑
PLem *lēmen‑
PIE *leiÌŻh₁mh̄́₁n‑os ‘from the bay’, vrddhi derivation of
  PIE *lih₁‑mh̄₁n‑ós ‘bay’, lit. ‘snuggling oneself against’, root present mediopassive participle of
  PIE *leiÌŻh₁‑ ‘snuggle’

Cognates

Ved láyate ‘snuggles [against], sticks [to]’

lepxĂ .

to make daisies

Etymology

gender change of
NLem lepxOj‑a
LMLem lùb‑xÒj‑ar, compound of
  LMLem lĂšb‑ar ‘flower’
MLem leeb‑ar ‘flower(ing plant)’
OLem lēb‑ ‘fascinate, charm’
PLem *lewb‑ ‘confuse’, Narten present of
PIE *leuÌŻbʰ‑ ‘love; infatuate, confuse’
 —and—
  LMLem xÒj‑yr ‘egg’
MLem xOUj‑yr
OLem xĂ¶ĂŒj‑
PLem *xƍwj‑
PIE *h₂ƍuÌŻiÌŻâ€‘Ăłm, vriddhi derivative of
  PIE *hâ‚‚Ă©uÌŻi‑s ‘bird’

The daisy is called ‘egg flower’ for its colouring. Feminisation is common in flower names, but not as universal as in trees.

Cognates

Eng love; Eng egg

lejcĂ .

to make fairies, fae

Etymology

NLem lejcO‑a
LMLem lùxecÒ‑yr
MLem leexecOO‑yr
OLem lēh‑hezhö‑, compound of
  OLem lēh‑ ‘shine’
PLem *lewh‑, Narten present of
PIE *leuÌŻk‑ ‘become bright, shine’
 —and—
  OLem hezhö‑ ‘person, individual’, inflected form of
PLem *hezhƍ ‘I’
PIE *h₁egÌ‘Ăłh₂

Cognates

Eng light; Gk áŒÎłáœœ ‘I’

liwĂ .

to make lead (symbol: Μο)

mìl liwÌar. far away, lit. ‘where the lead is’
jax-Ràks liwÌi: Go jump in the lake!, lit. ‘You should go to [where] the lead [is]!’

Etymology

NLem liw‑a
LMLem, MLem oliw‑yr, of unknown origin

Cognates

possibly OCS olovo ‘lead’, Gk ጀλφός ‘white rash’

loĂ g.

to spoon something-acc somewhere-dat etc., to scoop something-acc somewhere-dat etc. with a spoon

loĂčg. spoon

Etymology

NLem loug‑a
Besk lÄug
PCelt *lᾗg‑ā
PIE *lĂ©iÌŻg̑ʰ‑eh₂, zero-affix noun of
  PIE *leiÌŻg̑ʰ‑ ‘lick’

Cognates

Eng lick, Ir líach ‘ladle, dipper’

loxlĂ .

to make North American

loxlĂ r. North America

Etymology

gender change of
NLem loxlan‑a, from Lochlann, a Celtic word for Scandinavia, because North America was discovered by Scandinavian people

See darawà. for some information on continents’ names.

loxwĂ .

to make/build temples (houses of worship)

Etymology

NLem loxw‑a
LMLem, MLem loxw‑yr
OLem lohw‑
PLem *lohw‑
PIE *lóku‑s ‘pond, pool’

Some of the oldest Lemizh temples were dedicated to a lake goddess and built near lakes, hence the semantic development by metonymy.

doublet of loxwĂ j. and loxwĂ c.

Cognates

Gae loch ‘lake, fjord’, Lat lacus ‘lake’; unrelated to Eng lake

loxwĂ j.

to make/build polytheistic temples

Etymology

poststem from plural of
NLem loxw‑a ‘temple’
LMLem, MLem loxw‑yr
OLem lohw‑
PLem *lohw‑
PIE *lóku‑s ‘pond, pool’

Some of the oldest Lemizh temples were dedicated to a lake goddess and built near lakes, hence the semantic development by metonymy.

doublet of loxwĂ . and loxwĂ c.

Cognates

Gae loch ‘lake, fjord’, Lat lacus ‘lake’; unrelated to Eng lake

loxwĂ c.

to make/build churches, monotheistic temples

Etymology

poststem from singular of
NLem loxw‑a ‘temple’
LMLem, MLem loxw‑yr
OLem lohw‑
PLem *lohw‑
PIE *lóku‑s ‘pond, pool’

Some of the oldest Lemizh temples were dedicated to a lake goddess and built near lakes, hence the semantic development by metonymy.

doublet of loxwĂ . and loxwĂ j.

Cognates

Gae loch ‘lake, fjord’, Lat lacus ‘lake’; unrelated to Eng lake

lrĂ .

agentive ins: to exponentiate some value-dat by some value-nom to give some result-acc (see unit 7, Mathematical functions)

lrĂš. logarithm of some value-acc to some base-dat
lrĂŹ. nth-nom root of some value-acc

Etymology

This is an academic derivation of lÙr. ‘spatial aim; (geometric) dimension’. It notably violates Lemizh phonotactics, probably because mathematicians aren’t linguists.

RĂ .

to make each individual separately/respectively (see unit 7, Indefinite numerals);

Etymology

NLem R‑a
LMLem, MLem R‑yr
Ghe xˇ‑ə̄ /ÊÉŻË/

RĂ g.

to be a soul

RĂšg. soul

Usage notes

This isn’t quite the same as our monotheistic concept of the soul. It isn’t thought to be immortal, for one thing. C.G. Jung’s idea of anima/animus comes close, as do the dĂŠmons in Philip Pullman’s His Dark Materials.

Compare psĂ x..

Etymology

NLem Reg‑a
LMLem Rùg‑yr
MLem Reeg‑yr
OLem ghēg‑
PLem *gghewg‑ ‘hidden > soul’, Narten present of
PIE *gÊ°euÌŻg̑ʰ‑ ‘hide’

Cognates

Ved gĆ«Ìhati ‘hide something’

RĂ dj.

to prosper, thrive

Etymology

NLem, LMLem, MLem Randz‑a
OLem xandz‑ ‘sprout, bloom’
PLem *xandz‑, root present of
PIE *h₂endʰ‑

doublet of nĂ xt.

Cognates

Eng antho‑logy (via Gk áŒ„ÎœÎžÎżÏ‚ ‘flower’)

RĂ bv.

to make some, a fairly small number/amount (relative weight 3⁄8; see unit 7, Weighting numerals – usually with partitive bracket; see unit 8, Cardinal numerals)

Etymology

NLem yRbw‑a ‘a medium amount’
LMLem, MLem yRbw‑yr
Ghe xpËĄâ€‘É™Ì„ /ʁbÊ·ÉŻË/

The Ghean weighting numerals were (sorted from ‘few, little’ to ‘all, the whole’)
xpÊłâ€‘É™Ì„ pÊłâ€‘É™Ì„ xpËĄâ€‘É™Ì„ pËĄâ€‘É™Ì„ xp‑ə̄ p‑ə̄
/Ê€Ì„Ê™ÉŻË Ê™ÉŻË ʁbÊ·ÉŻË bÊ·ÉŻË χpɯː pɯː/

Only xpËĄÉ™Ì„, pËĄÉ™Ì„ (> bvĂ .) and xpə̄ (> xpĂ j.) have survived until today. The first two were fairly recently diminished in meaning, when the six-degree system was extended to an eight-degree one by inserting two new words between bvĂ . and xpĂ j., namely dmĂ j. and dmĂ ..

xpÊłÉ™Ì„ was replaced with a native word originally meaning ‘negligible’ (modern cĂ wb.) in Late Middle Lemizh. pÊłÉ™Ì„ and pə̄ never made their way into Lemizh; already Middle Lemizh had dropped them in favour of native words (modern crĂ . and jnĂ ., respectively).

RĂ ks.

dat: should do something-acc, shall we do something-acc?;
recommend, suggest someone-dat [to do] something-acc (see unit 13, Overview of the modals)

Etymology

NLem Ranks‑a
LMLem, MLem Rankt‑a ‘command’
OLem xankt‑ ‘force, compel’
PLem *xanks‑ ‘want’, s-desiderative of
PIE *h₂nek̑‑ ‘reach’

Cognates

Eng e‑nough, Lat nancīscor ‘stumble on, obtain, reach, find’

RĂ j.

to make geese

Usage notes

The familiar pejorative sense ‘(mentally) weak, stupid person’ is ancient. However, since Middle Lemizh times, calling someone a goose can also compliment them on their firm, resolute stance. It can be difficult for non-natives to tell the difference.

Etymology

NLem Ran‑a
LMLem, MLem Ran‑yr
OLem xan‑
PLem *kxan‑
PIE *g̑ʰhâ‚‚Ă©n‑s

Cognates

Eng goose, Lat ānser ‘goose’

RĂ jg.

to live, a/the life

RĂšjg. creature, living being

làxt (viì) RajgÌ Ràdjy. ‘Live and prosper!’

Etymology

NLem, LMLem, MLem Reng‑a
OLem xing‑ ‘move’
PLem *xing‑, nasal-infix present of
PIE *h₂eiÌŻg‑ ‘move (violently?)’

Cognates

Ved Ă©jati ‘stirs’

RĂ jd.

to digress by saying something-acc to someone-dat, to say something-acc to someone-dat incidentally, by the way

Usage notes

This word is typically used as a main predicate. It denotes that its accusative object is just a parenthetical statement not central to the current subject. See pragmatics page III, Utterance modifiers: Verbs of communication.

Etymology

NLem, LMLem, MLem Rand‑a
OLem ghand‑ ‘abduct’
PLem *gghand‑ ‘take, seize’, nasal-infix present of
PIE *gʰed‑

doublet of RĂ zw.

Cognates

Eng get, Lat pre‑hendƍ ‘take, seize’

RĂ jb.

to put something-acc into a bag

RĂŹjb. bag

Etymology

NLem Renb‑a
LMLem, MLem Renb‑yr
OLem ghenb‑ ‘seize and put into one’s bag (?)’
PLem *gghenb‑ ‘grab, take’, nasal-infix present of
PIE *gʰeh₁b‑

The OLem word possibly referred to tax collectors and/or bandits going around with bags or sacks, grabbing people’s possessions.

doublet of gĂ b.

Cognates

Lat habeƍ ‘have, hold’ (but not Eng have), Ir gabhlóg ‘fork’

RĂ c.

to rule as a monarch over someone-dat; in grammar: to act as a predicate of an object-dat

RĂšc. monarch; king, queen; also the constellation roughly corresponding to Cepheus (see appendix, Constellations)

Recwìx. (grammar) sentence (⇐ wàx Rùca. ‘the parole is the predicate’)

Usage notes

The Ghean monarch likely was an absolute ruler, possibly something like a god-king. After the Ghean rule, by Late Middle Lemizh times, the word was applied to the Lemizh king, and by extension to monarchs of other countries. During Early New Lemizh times, Lemaria became a constitutional monarchy, which it remains today. RĂ c. in modern contexts therefore mainly refers to representative and administrative tasks.

Etymology

NLem aRc‑a
LMLem àRcc‑ar
MLem ayRcc‑ar
Ghe aəxshshˡ‑ā /a͜əʁʒʒʌː/

Cognates

unrelated to Lat rex ‘king’, Ved rājan ‘king, prince’

RĂ cj.

to colour something-dat

RĂčcj. paint, colour (substance for colouring something)

RacjÌzw. speckled (⇐ ⇔ Ràcj Ìzwa. ‘colour erratically’)
RycjnÌs. halogen
RicjgwlĂš. alkaline earth metal
RicjvnĂš. alkali metal

Etymology

NLem Rarj‑a
LMLem, MLem Rarj‑ar
OLem gharj‑
PLem *ggharj‑ ‘paint, anoint’, root present of
PIE *gÊ°reiÌŻâ€‘

Cognates

Eng grimace, Gk χρ᜷ω ‘paint, anoint’

RĂ z.

to make snakes (also the constellation Serpens; see appendix, Constellations)

Usage notes

While snakes in Lemaria are mostly small and harmless, and there never has been a serpent slaying myth in Lemizh culture, there is one great serpent this word is applied to: namely, the constellation corresponding to our Serpens.

Etymology

NLem Rangz‑a
LMLem, MLem Rangwj‑yr
OLem xangwj‑
PLem *xangwj‑
PIE *hâ‚‚Ă©ngÊ·Ê°i‑s

Cognates

Ger Unke ‘fire-bellied toad’, Lat anguis ‘snake, serpent, dragon’

RĂ zw.

to make/build roads, streets

RÙzw. (colloquial) tram (short form of ykhRÌzw. ⇐ ⇔ Ìkh RÙzwy. ‘ship benefitting from streets’)

RizwsnÌw. Milky Way (The word is a popular test of foreigners’ pronunciation skills.)

Etymology

NLem Rozw‑a
LMLem, MLem Rozw‑yr
OLem ghozw‑
PLem *gghozw‑ ‘way, road’
PIE *gÊ°Ăłd‑uÌŻâ€‘eh₂, uÌŻ-stem noun of
  PIE *gÊ°ed‑ ‘take, seize’

doublet of RĂ jd.

Cognates

Ger Gasse ‘lane’, Eng get, Lat pre‑hendƍ ‘take, seize’

RĂ w.

to make hounds, hunting dogs

— Rynwù RÌnje. hunter and hunted (used figuratively), lit. ‘hounds and geese’

Etymology

NLem oRw‑a
LMLem, MLem oRw‑yr
Ghe oxfˇ‑ə̄ /ɔʁÎČɯː/ ‘dog’, an onomatopoeia like axʱ‑ə̄ /aɎɯː/ ‘cat’ and otq‑ə̄ /ɔtqɯː/ ‘chicken’

RĂ xt. [1]

to make shoulders

Etymology

NLem Rant‑a
LMLem, MLem Rant‑yr
OLem xanht‑ ‘doorpost’
PLem *xanht‑
PIE *hâ‚‚Ć„Ì„h₁t‑eh₂

Cognates

Lat antae ‘pillars on either side of a doorway’

RĂ xt. [2]

to make ducks

Etymology

NLem Ranxt‑a
LMLem, MLem Ranxt‑yr
OLem xanxt‑
PLem *xanxt‑
PIE *hâ‚‚Ă©nh₂t‑s

Cognates

Lat anas ‘duck’, Ger Ente ‘duck’

RĂ xp.

to be/feel ashamed in front of someone-dat of something-acc/causal-transporting

Usage notes

In contemporary use, this word has no sexual connotations. The Lemizh tend to be ashamed of other things such as ignorance or violence.

Etymology

NLem, LMLem, MLem Ranp‑a
OLem xanp‑ ‘shame’ [tr.] > ‘feel ashamed’
PLem *xanf‑ ‘rebuke’, root present of
PIE *h₂neh₃‑

Cognates

Gk áœ„ÎœÎżÎŒÎ±Îč ‘blame, scold’

RĂ st.

self-receiving: to dream (of) something-acc

Resthràk. to have a nightmare (⇐ ⇔ Ràst hrùke. ‘dream sent by an ogre’)

Usage notes

This word is only used for experiences during sleep, not for hopes and wishes.

Etymology

NLem Rostx‑a
LMLem, MLem Rostxj‑er ‘strange lands’
OLem ghostxj‑
PLem *gghostxj‑ ‘foreign parts, abroad’
PIE *gÊ°Ăłsth₂i‑s ‘stranger, foreigner’

doublet of xudjĂ s.

Cognates

Eng host, guest (via Lat hospes ‘host, guest’)

RĂ sw.

to make (it) spring

Usage notes

Technically, spring starts with the spring equinox (around 21rd March in our calendar) and ends with the summer solstice (around 21st June). In everyday parlance, however, the term is usually applied to the time spanning weeks 14 to 26 in the Lemizh Sun calendar, which starts and ends somewhat earlier.

Etymology

NLem R‑usw‑a, clarifying compound of
  NLem R‑a
LMLem, MLem lz‑ir, temporal noun of
  MLem lz‑yr ‘green’
Ghe ᮛsËĄâ€‘É™Ì„ /dÌ ËĄzÌŸÉŻË/
 —and—
  NLem, LMLem, MLem usw‑a ‘enjoy’
OLem husw‑ ‘enjoyable’
PLem *husw‑, u-stem adjective of
PIE *h₁uÌŻes‑ ‘good’

Cognates

Ved vásu- ‘good, magnificent’, OCS veselƭ ‘merry’

RenĂ .

to make primates

Etymology

NLem Ren‑a ‘monkey’
LMLem, MLem aRen‑yr
Egy j꜄n /ʔaˈʕen/ ‘baboon’

doublet of RenĂ j. and RenĂ c., from which this word is abstracted

RenĂ j.

to make monkeys, apes (also the constellation in the region of Carina and Vela; see appendix, Constellations)

Etymology

poststem from plural of
NLem Ren‑a
LMLem, MLem aRen‑yr
Egy j꜄n /ʔaˈʕen/ ‘baboon’

doublet of Renà. and Renàc. – the plural poststem comes from the fact that many monkeys and apes are highly social animals.

RenĂ c.

to make lemurs (and, loosely, other Strepsirrhini such as loris and bush babies)

Etymology

poststem from singular of
NLem Ren‑a ‘monkey’
LMLem, MLem aRen‑yr
Egy j꜄n /ʔaˈʕen/ ‘baboon’

doublet of Renà. and Renàj. – the singular poststem comes from the erroneous assumption that lemurs, in contrast to monkeys, are solitary animals.

rĂ .

to make one individual

to make an angle unit, an angle of one radian or any other dimensionless unit (see appendix, Units of measurement)

rĂŹr sĂšspy. prime minister

Etymology

NLem r‑a
LMLem, MLem r‑yr
Ghe áŽ›Êłâ€‘É™Ì„ /rÌ ÉŻË/

ramĂ c.

ramĂČc. Ramo (pen name of the author of the TlöngĂ¶Ì€l, the epic novel defining the onset of New Lemizh)

Etymology

irregular masculinisation of
NLem ram‑o

The fact that Ramo chose a pen name with an inner tentive case speaks volumes.

rĂ gw.

to make a dark colour, to darken (referring to colour, not to light intensity)

Etymology

NLem argw‑a
LMLem, MLem argw‑yr
OLem hargw‑ ‘dark’
PLem *hargw‑, o-stem adjective of
PIE *h₁regʷ‑

Cognates

Gk ጜρΔÎČÎżÏ‚ ‘god of darkness’, possibly Ice ragna‑rök ‘end times in Norse mythology’ (via ON rökr ‘twilight’)

rĂ dj.

dat: to (accidentally) discover something-acc

Etymology

NLem, LMLem, MLem ardz‑a ‘emerge’
OLem ardz‑
PLem *ardz‑, root present of
PIE *redʰ‑ ‘emerge, appear’

Cognates

OCS roĆŸdÇ« ‘give birth’

rĂ t.

to drive a vehicle-acc, to steer something/someone-acc (for the thing moved) or dat (for the thing manoeuvred, also metaphorically)

rĂšt. also the constellation Auriga; see appendix, Constellations

Etymology

NLem, LMLem, MLem ret‑a
OLem ret‑
PLem *reth‑ ‘run’, Narten present of
PIE *ret‑

The verb may have meant ‘go on wheels’ already in PIE, as *rot‑eh₂ is the source of Lat rota ‘wheel’ and *rot‑h₂‑ós that of Ved rátha ‘chariot’.

Cognates

Ger Rad ‘wheel’, Ir rith ‘run’; likely unrelated to Eng rattle and Ger rattern

rĂ tx.

to give hope to someone-dat about something-acc;
dat, perfect or not topicalised: to hope for something-acc (see unit 13, Verbs of certainty)

Etymology

NLem rentx‑a
LMLem, MLem rentk‑a ‘tackle confidently’
OLem rentk‑
PLem *rentk‑, sk̑-present of
PIE *reh₁dʰ‑ ‘be successful’

Cognates

Ger reden ‘talk’, OCS raĆŸdÇ« ‘care’

rĂ jd.

to make red, to redden (with embarrassment-caus/psu)

riljdkĂ . to make cyan or turquoise

rijdvnù. lithium (symbol: Ε) (⇐ vnù rìjde. ‘making fire red’)

Usage notes

rÌjd. is more likely to describe the focal colour (‘bright red’) than other colour terms, as attested since Middle Lemizh. (Conversely, ‘reddish’, i.e. a compound with a weakening numeral, is more likely to be used for hues that are not quite focal red.)

Judges wear red, which has resulted in colloquially calling them rùjd., and in the use of the verb ràjd. (‘making something-dat red’) to refer to verdicts.

Etymology

NLem rundr‑a
LMLem, MLem rundr‑yr
OLem hrundr‑
PLem *hrundr‑, r-stem adjective of
PIE *h₁reuÌŻdʰ‑

This is the word for ‘red’ in most Indo-European languages.

doublet of redmĂ .

Cognates

Eng red, Gk ጐρυΞρός ‘red’

rĂ c.

to make points / an area to the right of something-nom (see unit 12, Temporal and spatial verbs)

recxnÌ., rÌc. south (symbol: r)
rilckexnÌ., rilckÌ. north (symbol: X)

Usage notes

Right-handed men used to carry their swords on the left, which gave rise to the custom of letting the lady walk on the right-hand side so as not to ruin her dress when drawing. Curiously, the ‘male’ poststem of rÌc. and the ‘female’ one of the opposite rilckÌ. have not been able to change this tradition.

Likewise, it is not socially acceptable for the man to walk too far away from the lady, nor to walk between two ladies, despite the gender change of these words.

Etymology

gender change of
NLem Ur‑a
LMLem, MLem Ur‑yr
OLem ĂŒr‑
PLem *Ć«r‑, r-stem adjective of
PIE *uÌŻeg̑‑ ‘lively, strong’

Many languages derive their words for the direction ‘right’ from the idea that the right hand is the ‘correct’ or the ‘strong’ one. Gender change occurred to avoid homophony with the numeral rà..

Cognates

Eng wake, vigour (via Lat vigeƍ ‘thrive, flourish’); however, none of the original sounds is left in the present-day word: both r and c come from the PIE adjectival suffix -r-.

rĂ zg.

to make a braid, to braid something-dat

Etymology

NLem, LMLem, MLem arzg‑a
OLem arzg‑
PLem *arzg‑, root present of
PIE *resg‑

Cognates

Lat restis ‘rope’, Lit rezgĂč ‘braid, knit’

rĂ w.

to make an amount (see unit 7, Weighting numerals – usually with partitive bracket; see unit 8, Cardinal numerals)

Etymology

NLem orw‑a
LMLem ĂČrw‑yl
MLem oerw‑yl
Ghe oeᮛpÊłâ€‘É™Ì„ /ɔ͜ɛrÌ Ê™ÉŻË/

rĂ wb.

to push something-acc somewhere-dat etc. (dat can be ambiguous); to push, press against something-dat; also non-sending

rÌwb. button, key to press, such as on a keyboard or musical instrument

Usage notes

Since Old Lemizh, this verb has been connoted positively. Don’t use it to translate hostile kinds of pushing such as ‘shove, jostle’.

Etymology

contamination of
NLem srUmb‑a
LMLem, MLem srimb‑a
OLem srimb‑
PLem *tsrimb‑, root present of
PIE *dÊ°reiÌŻbʰ‑ ‘drive’
 —with—
NLem, LMLem, MLem runp‑a ‘break, snap’
OLem runp‑ ‘break, snap’ [intr.]
PLem *runp‑, nasal-infix present of
PIE *reuÌŻp‑

ràwb. (for expected **sràwb.) was contaminated with ràxp., the modern word for ‘pull’.

possible doublet of srUĂ .

Cognates

Eng drive

rĂ xp.

to pull something-acc somewhere-dat etc. (dat can be ambiguous); at something-dat; also non-sending

rirxpĂčf. lifting device: lift, elevator; crane

Etymology

NLem, LMLem, MLem runp‑a ‘break, snap’
OLem runp‑ ‘break, snap’ [intr.]
PLem *runp‑, nasal-infix present of
PIE *reuÌŻp‑

This word replaced NLem dux‑a – compare duxvàsk..

Cognates

Eng rupture (via Lat rumpƍ ‘break, burst, tear’ [tr.]), Ved lumpáti ‘breaks’ [tr.]

rĂ h.

to like something or someone-acc/dat;
agentive caus, causal-reflexive: to please someone-nom

Usage notes

This verb is usually taken to mean ‘like very much’; it is close to our informal use of ‘love’ as in ‘I love books’.

Etymology

NLem irh‑a
LMLem, MLem irhh‑a
Ghe ipshshÊłâ€‘a /ÉȘʙrÌ Ì„rÌ Ì„a/

rĂ s.

to make frost (a cover of small ice crystals)

Etymology

NLem rOs‑a
LMLem rÒs‑yr
MLem rOOs‑yr ‘dew’
OLem rös‑
PLem *rƍs‑
PIE *ráč“s

doublet of rOsĂ c.

Cognates

Lat rƍs ‘dew’, OCS rosa ‘dew’

rĂ sk.

to make the ground, the floor

Etymology

NLem arsk‑a
LMLem arsk‑er
MLem arsk‑er ‘area, ground’
OLem harsk‑ ‘get somewhere, end up somewhere’
PLem *harsk‑, sk̑-present of
PIE *h₁er‑

Cognates

Hit āri ‘arrives’, probably Gk áŒ”ÏÏ‡ÎżÎŒÎ±Îč ‘come, go’

rĂ st.

dat: to win something-acc from/against someone-nom

Usage notes

While this verb only meant achieving a victory in Late Middle Lemizh, it now also expresses getting a reward or price, as in English and many other languages.

Etymology

NLem remst‑a
LMLem rù‑mizt‑yr, clarifying compound of
  LMLem rù‑a
MLem ree‑a ‘urge, force’
OLem hrē‑ ‘ask’
PLem *hrē‑, Narten present of
PIE *h₁reh₁‑
 —and—
  LMLem, MLem mizt‑yr ‘reward’
OLem mizt‑
PLem *mizt‑
PIE *misdÊ°h₁‑ós ‘reward, wages’

Cognates

Gk ጐρέω ‘ask’; Gk ÎŒÎčσΞός ‘reward, wages, pay’

rĂ qk.

to touch something-dat

Etymology

NLem, LMLem, MLem reqk‑a ‘meet’
OLem rethk‑
PLem *rethk‑, sk̑-present of
PIE *reh₁t‑ ‘meet, find’

Cognates

OCS ob‑ręơtÇ« ‘find’

rendĂ .

to summarise something-dat to something-acc

rendÌ. summary

Etymology

NLem rend‑a
LMLem licùnd‑yr ‘summary’
MLem liceend‑yr
OLem lizh‑hēnd‑ ‘conclude (a speech)’, compound of
  OLem lizh‑ ‘bind’
PLem *lizh‑, root present of
PIE *leiÌŻg̑‑
 —and—
  OLem hēnd‑ ‘say’
PLem *hēnd‑, e-reduplicated athematic present of
PIE *h₁edʰ‑

Cognates

Lat ligāre ‘bind’; Ved ā́ha ‘says’

redmĂ .

to make cobalt (symbol: Μ)

Etymology

NLem redm‑a
LMLem rùdmyn‑yr ‘meteorite iron’
MLem reedmyn‑yr
OLem hrēdmyn‑ ‘rust, meteorite iron?’
PLem *hrewdman‑
PIE *h₁rĂ©uÌŻdʰ‑mnÌ„ ‘something red, red stuff?’, neuter abstract -mnÌ„-noun of
  PIE *h₁reuÌŻdʰ‑ ‘red’

The name for meteorite iron was transferred to cobalt probably by mistake – iron meteorites typically contain less than 1% cobalt but about 8% of the chemically similar nickel, and of course over 90% iron.

doublet of rĂ jd.

Cognates

Eng red, Gk ጐρυΞρός ‘red’

rOsĂ c.

to make crystals

Etymology

poststem from singular of
NLem rOs‑a ‘frost’
LMLem rÒs‑yr
MLem rOOs‑yr ‘dew’
OLem rös‑
PLem *rƍs‑
PIE *ráč“s

This academic formation from the word for ‘frost’ replaced an older Greek loanword.

Cognates

Lat rƍs ‘dew’, OCS rosa ‘dew’

nĂ .

nonexistence (‘zero’) negator (see unit 6, Negators): do not do something-acc;
to make something-dat nonexistent, to undo, annul, destroy something-dat (all: also with inner cons for the object, see unit 6, ‘unknot’);
to make zero individuals, none, nothing

Usage notes

Interestingly, the proverbial entities ‘doing nothing’ are various types of poisonous or inedible mushroom, as in waxnà vmyjkrÌgwem. ‘be as silent as a fly agaric’ or nà vmyjcrÌem. ‘do nothing, like a death cap’. Such phrases have been recorded since Late Middle Lemizh times.

Etymology

NLem, LMLem n‑a
MLem ne‑a
OLem ne‑, inflected form of
PLem, PIE *ne ‘not’

Cognates

Eng no, Lat ne ‘no(t)’

nĂ gc.

to (make) war, a war with/against someone-dat

Etymology

NLem engj‑a ‘armour’
LMLem, MLem engj‑yr
OLem hengj‑ ‘protection, armour’
PLem *hengj‑ ‘spines > protection, armour’
PIE *h₁ég̑ʰi‑s ‘hedgehog’

Cognates

Ger Igel ‘hedgehog’, Gk áŒÏ‡áż–ÎœÎżÏ‚ ‘hedgehog’

nĂ gw.

self-receiving: to drink something-acc

Usage notes

This verb frequently refers to drinking alcoholic beverages in particular. This use is attested from Middle Lemizh.

Etymology

NLem engw‑a
LMLem ùngw‑a
MLem eengw‑a
OLem hēngw‑
PLem *hēngw‑, e-reduplicated athematic present of
PIE *h₁egʷʰ‑

Cognates

Lat ēbrius ‘drunk’, TochB yokĂ€áčƒ â€˜drinks’

nĂ d.

to lead someone-dat (as a boss, chief)

nĂšd. boss, chief

nednì. unemployed (⇐ nà nùdy. ‘no boss [exists]’)

Usage notes

This term is used for lower ranks in a hierarchy than igcĂ d., and/or more informally.

Etymology

NLem end‑a
LMLem ùnd‑ar, nominalisation of
MLem eend‑a ‘speak gravely’
OLem hēnd‑ ‘say’
PLem *hēnd‑, e-reduplicated athematic present of
PIE *h₁edʰ‑

Cognates

Ved ā́ha ‘says’

nabĂ .

to make a nabu, the European currency unit (symbol: Z; see appendix, Units of measurement)

Etymology

Eth nabƩ
PWald *NabĆ«Ì ‘God of literacy and wisdom’
Akk 𒀭𒀝

The Mesopotamian god NabĆ« was equated with Mercury and Hermes and thus became the God of trade and later the namesake of the European currency. The symbol is the Lemizh supplemental letter ‘n’ and is also reminiscent of this god’s symbol, the caduceus or winged staff Á.

nĂ t.

to open something-acc, also non-sending
acc, occasionally self-transporting: to
open;
(in measurements, else informal) to make 65536⁶ individuals (see appendix, Units of measurement)

djUtnÌt. Saturnian day, the Lemizh equivalent of Monday (symbol: Æ; see appendix, Date)

Usage notes

The inherited name of the god has been used metonymically in the sense of ‘seed, inception, beginning’ since Old Lemizh times. In Early New Lemizh, the verbal form expressed facilitating access to something, or the ‘opening’ of new opportunities – a usage that is alive today.

The planet Saturn, as well as the god, is called djistnÌt. in Modern Lemizh.

Etymology

haplology of
NLem dzokont‑a
LMLem, MLem dziskont‑yr ‘Seedputter (the God of agriculture)’
OLem dziskont‑
PLem *dzeskont‑
PIE *dÊ°h̄₁skÌ‘â€‘Ăłnt‑s ‘putting, making’, skÌ‘Ă©-present active participle of
  PIE *dÊ°eh₁‑ ‘put, make’

Expected would be ModLem **djotnĂ t. and resulting **djUt-djotnÌt. for the name of the day; this caused the haplology. The root is probably the same as in PIE *dÊ°oh₁‑nĂ©h₂‑s ‘seed, grain’.

Cognates

Gk ÎŽÎŻÎŽÏ‰ÎŒÎč ‘give’, Lat dƍ ‘give’

natlĂ .

to make an angular power density unit, an angular power density of 2.813 milliwatts per steradian (see appendix, Units of measurement)

Etymology

shortened form, academic loan of
Koi Μαυ‑τÎčλ᜷‑៱ ‘seafaring’, nominal derivation of
  Koi ÎœÎ±áżŠâ€‘Ï‚ ‘ship’
SHell *snaƩ‑s ‘boat’
PIE *snĂ©h₂‑u‑s, u-stem noun of
  PIE *sneh₂‑ ‘swim, bathe’

Having been invented together with the unit of power density, this unit too has a naval name.

Cognates

Eng navy (via Lat nāvis ‘ship’)

nĂ j.

to make points / an area between objects-nom (see unit 12, Temporal and spatial verbs)

Usage notes

See the connotations section of rĂ c. for some context on gender change in spatial verbs.

Etymology

gender change of
NLem en‑a, inflected form of
LMLem, MLem en
OLem hen ‘in’
PLem *hen
PIE *h₁en

Gender change occurred to avoid homophony with the negator nĂ ..

Cognates

Eng in, Gk ጐΜ ‘in’

nĂ jw.

(to pursue) habitually, (to pursue) a habit (see unit 12, Aspect)

Etymology

NLem nanw‑a
LMLem, MLem nanw‑yr ‘habit(ual)’
OLem n‑anw‑, compound of
  OLem ne‑ ‘not’, inflected form of
PLem *ne
PIE *ne ‘no, not’
 —and—
  OLem anw‑ ‘new, unfamiliar’
PLem *anw‑, u-stem adjective of
PIE *neuÌŻâ€‘ ‘new’

Cognates

Eng no; Eng new

nĂ zd.

to make birds

nymzdlÌb. flamingo (also the constellation in the region of Triangulum Australe, Pavo, Ara and Telescopium; see appendix, Constellations) (⇐ ⇔ nÌzd lÌbym. ‘a bird like a flower’)

Etymology

NLem nezd‑a
LMLem, MLem nezd‑yr
OLem nizd‑ ‘nest’
PLem *nizd‑
PIE *nisd‑ós

The meaning ‘bird’ developed from MLem nezd‑ar, lit. ‘nest-builder’, which is attested in a few instances.

The word for ‘flamingo’ is a calque from Sikelian ραΎαρΜ ‘rose-bird’.

Cognates

Eng nest, Lat nīdus ‘nest’

nĂ w.

to make valleys

Etymology

NLem namr‑a
LMLem, MLem namr‑yr
OLem namr‑
PLem *namr‑ ‘tilted (ground) > valley’, r-stem adjective of
PIE *nem‑ ‘tilt’

Cognates

Ved nĂĄmate ‘tilt’, TochB ñmetsi ‘tilt’

nĂ wb.

to inflate, stretch something-dat into some shape-acc; to burst, rip, tear something-dat into something-acc [e.g. dust; in two];
dat: to stretch; to burst, rip, tear into something-acc

Usage notes

The ‘deforming’ and ‘destroying’ meanings are distinguished by the acc object or – often simpler – by instead using a nominal verb expressing a shape, versus nominal verbs such as skràp. ‘split, turn into parts’, dwà. ‘turn into two [parts]’, etc.

Etymology

NLem, LMLem, MLem nemb‑a ‘burst, tear’
OLem nemb‑
PLem *nemb‑ ‘burst, shatter’, Narten present of
PIE *nebʰ‑

Cognates

Ved nábhate ‘bursts, shatters’

nĂ xt.

to make beards

nĂšxt. bearded; slang: damn, bloody (intensifier)

Etymology

NLem nont‑a
LMLem, MLem Ryndzont‑yr ‘plant, something growing’
OLem xyndzont‑
PLem *xandzont‑
PIE *h₂nÌ„dÊ°â€‘Ăłnt‑s ‘sprouting, blooming’, root present active participle of
  PIE *h₂endʰ‑ ‘sprout, bloom’

doublet of RĂ dj.

Cognates

Eng antho‑logy (via Gk áŒ„ÎœÎžÎżÏ‚ ‘flower’)

nĂ h.

to make nine individuals

Usage notes

The number nine has been associated with art since classical times (corresponding to Late Middle Lemizh), as can be seen in the number of the Muses, sources of the knowledge contained in art. Without doubt, Terpsichore is the fairest one of them.

Much earlier, in Old Lemizh, nine was the number of healers. In Middle Lemizh, it has come to denote placebo effects: if I give you nine pills, I am helping you but not because of any pharmacologic effect of the pills. Counseling someone nine times generates something close to a self-fulfilling prophecy.

Etymology

NLem neh‑a
LMLem nùh‑yl, contamination of
MLem nee‑yl
OLem hnē‑, inflected form of
PLem *hnewan
PIE *h₁nĂ©uÌŻnÌ„
 —with—
MLem dih‑yl ‘ten’
OLem dish‑, inflected form of
PLem *deshamt
PIE *dĂ©k̑mÌ„t

Cognates

Eng nine, Gk ጐΜΜέα ‘nine’

nĂ s.

dat: to smell something-nom; nom: to smell of something-acc

nĂčs. nose

Etymology

NLem nas‑a ‘nose’
LMLem, MLem nas‑yr
OLem nas‑
PLem *nas‑
PIE *nás‑os

Cognates

Eng nose, Lat nāsus ‘nose’

nenĂ .

self-transporting: to run somewhere-dat etc.;
acc: to drift or float quickly somewhere ditto in water etc.-nom [or agentive caus]

nenÌ. also the constellation roghly corresponding to Antlia, Pyxis, and parts of Hydra and Puppis (see appendix, Constellations)

Etymology

NLem neni‑a
LMLem nùnì‑a
MLem neenii‑a
OLem nēnī‑
PLem *nēnī‑ ‘be driven > run’, intensive of
PIE *neiÌŻH‑ ‘lead, guide’

The secondary meaning ‘to drift quickly’ is attested from Late Middle Lemizh, in a song about 255 toy balloons made from pig bladders.

Cognates

Ved náyati ‘leads’

nezĂ .

to acquaint someone-dat with someone/something-acc;
dat, perfect: to know someone/something-acc (personally, from one’s own experience)

Usage notes

In LMLem, the word specifically referred to a formal yet superficial introduction of new people in the neighbourhood, which was traditionally done by women. While this concept can still be felt today (as evidenced by the feminisation of the poststem), the meaning significantly broadened in NLem times to include acquaintance with things, events and facts.

Etymology

gender change of
NLem nezadwr‑a ‘become acquainted, get to know’
LMLem nùzdwor‑a
MLem neezdwor‑a
OLem nēz‑dwor‑, compound of
  OLem nēz‑ ‘push’
PLem *newz‑, Narten present of
PIE *neuÌŻd‑
 —and—
  OLem dwor‑ ‘pasture gate’
PLem *dwor‑
PIE *dÊ°uÌŻĂłr‑s ‘door’

The concept behind the OLem compound is ‘push open the door to someone(’s land) > make contact with someone’.

Cognates

Ved nudáte ‘pushes’; Eng door

nexwaklĂ .

to work manually, to do a blue-collar job

nexwaklĂš. blue-collar worker

Etymology

NLem nexwatal‑a ‘Nechwatal’ (prototypical blue-collar worker)
Gl Nechwatal, of unknown origin

niftnĂ j.

to make the god Neptune/Poseidon; to make the planet Uranus (symbol: Ç)

Usage notes

See djeipysrĂ d. for some information on Lemizh polytheism, and xmĂ j. for the weekday associated with this god.

Confusingly, the planet Uranus, known to the Lemizh since ancient times, was named by them after the water god – corresponding to the god Neptune/Poseidon in our tradition. The planet Neptune, discovered in modern times, has the Midwinter God, fOpysrÌf., as its patron.

Etymology

gender change of
NLem nifton‑a, academic loan of
OLem nifton‑ ‘Nephew of the Waters’
PLem *nefton‑
PIE *nĂ©pton‑os

Cognates

Lat Neptune, Ir Nechtan

notĂ .

to make hot dogs

Usage notes

The typical hot dogs eaten in Lemaria are made with mustard, onions and curry powder. The recipe is said to have originated in Central Danubia.

Etymology

from the country of Notoslava, southeast of Danubia, which has nothing to do whatsoever with the recipe

Cognates

Gk ÎœáœčÏ„ÎżÏ‚ ‘south’

nrĂ .

(to keep the) peace

nrìl. ‘passive’ peace (which is there without having to be actively kept)
nrĂšR. to make peace

Etymology

NLem nar‑a
LMLem, MLem Rynar‑yr
OLem xynar‑ ‘shaman, seer, healer’
PLem *xanar‑ ‘inspiration, intuition’
PIE *hâ‚‚Ă©nrÌ„

Cognates

Gk ᜄΜαρ ‘dream’, Hit innarā ‘robust, intentional’

mĂ .

to make or build something-acc from something-dat, to turn something-dat into something-acc;
dat: to turn into something-acc, to become something-acc

mÌ. entity, thing; stuff

mÌ ganàa. something sung, song (concrete noun)
mÌ sràba. writing, text
etc. (see unit 14, Objects related to language and the sixth exercise there)

Usage notes

See grÌc. ‘chicken’.

Etymology

NLem me‑a
LMLem mù‑a
MLem mee‑a ‘change’
OLem mē‑ ‘change’ [intr.]
PLem *mē‑, Narten present of
PIE *meiÌŻâ€‘ ‘(ex)change’

Cognates

Ved vĂ­ mayante ‘take turns (?)’, TochB mĂ€sk‑ ‘exchange’; unrelated to Eng make

malanĂ j.

to make platypuses

Etymology

NLem malanon‑a, from an Australian language

marnĂ .

to make beetles

Usage notes

The image of this word changed completely in NLem: from insects that were pests to beetles in general, and especially to harmless and beautiful ones such as ladybirds. The semantic change meant that a new word for insects was needed (especially by entomologists), so entoma was academically loaned from Koine Greek.

Etymology

NLem marn‑a
LMLem, MLem marnk‑yr ‘insect, pest’
OLem marnk‑ ‘something to be squashed > insect, pest’
PLem *marnx‑ ‘clutch, squash’, nasal-infix present of
PIE *merh₂‑

Cognates

Gk ΌᜱρΜαΌαÎč ‘fight’, probably Eng night‑mare

markĂ w.

to make kangaroos (also a constellation in the region of Pavo, Tucana, Grus and Phoenix; see appendix, Constellations)

Etymology

NLem mark‑uw‑a, from an Australian language

This word is said to be based on a misunderstanding, as the Australian term actually refers to a type of alcoholic sweet.

manwĂ .

to magnetically repel (dat: attract) something-acc, to be a magnet, to be magnetic; magnetism

manwÌ. ferromagnetic

Etymology

NLem, LMLem, MLem manw‑a ‘affection’
OLem manw‑
PLem *manw‑, nĂ©uÌŻ-present of
PIE *men‑ ‘think’

The NLem word for affection gradually replaced ned‑a << Koi ÎŒÎ±ÎłÎœáż†Ï„Îč‑ς ‘magnet’ (probably from the region ÎœÎ±ÎłÎœÎ·ÏƒÎŻÎ± in Ancient Greece, where magnetic stones were found).

doublet of màjw. ‘feel affection’, màsw., minà. and swmilà.

Cognates

Gk ÎŒÎœÎŹÎżÎŒÎ±Îč ‘remember’, Lat mēns ‘mind, reason’

mĂ g.

to make shipyards, space docks

mUgÌkh. (clarifying compound used by landlubbers) shipyard, space dock

Etymology

NLem meg‑a
LMLem napùgi‑yr
Koi ÎœÎ±Ï…â€‘Ï€áœ”ÎłÎčâ€‘ÎżÎœ, nominalisation, compound of
  Koi ÎœÎ±áżŠâ€‘Ï‚ ‘ship’
SHell *snaƩ‑s ‘boat’
PIE *snĂ©h₂‑u‑s, u-stem noun of
  PIE *sneh₂‑ ‘swim, bathe’
 —and—
  Koi Ï€Î·ÎłÎœÏ…â€‘ÎŒÎč ‘fasten, stiffen, build’
SHell *pāgnu‑mi, nasal-infix present of
PIE *peh₂g̑‑ ‘stiffen, become solid’

Cognates

Eng navy (via Lat nāvis ‘ship’); Eng fang, Lat pangƍ ‘fasten’

mĂ t.

self-receiving: to sleep

mĂŹRt. wake up

Etymology

NLem, LMLem mitn‑a
MLem mit‑ne‑a, compound of
  MLem mit‑a ‘wake’
OLem mit‑ ‘awake’
PLem *mis‑, o-stem adjective of
PIE *meiÌŻs‑ ‘open one’s eyes’
 —and—
  MLem ne‑a ‘not’
OLem ne‑, inflected form of
PLem *ne
PIE *ne ‘no, not’

doublet of melĂ j.

Cognates

Ved miáčŁĂĄti ‘opens the eyes’; Eng no

mĂ px.

self-receiving: to understand something-acc

Etymology

NLem umpx‑a
LMLem, MLem umpk‑a
OLem umpk‑
PLem *umpk‑, sk̑-present of
PIE *uÌŻebʰ‑ ‘weave, wrap around’

The meaning probably comes from a metaphor on the lines of ‘wrap one’s head around something’.

doublet of wĂ b. and wmĂ b.

Cognates

Eng weave, Gk áœ‘Ï†Î±ÎŻÎœÏ‰ ‘weave’

mĂ j.

to bind/tie something/someone-acc to something-dat with a rope

mĂčj. rope

Etymology

NLem maljm‑a ‘restrain, bind with a rope’
LMLem, MLem malngw‑a ‘hinder, restrain’
OLem malngw‑
PLem *malngw‑, nasal-infix present of
PIE *melkʷ‑ ‘hinder, harm, destroy’

Ramo apparently was the first to let his sailors in the TlöngĂ¶Ì€l use the tool noun of ‘restrain’ instead of the standard word for ‘rope’, NLem sxn‑a (<< PIE *sh₂eiÌŻâ€‘ ‘fetter, bind’, cognate with Ger Seil ‘rope’).

Cognates

Gk ÎČÎ»ÎŹÏ€Ï„Ï‰ ‘hinder, harm’, Ved marcĂĄyati ‘damage’

mĂ jd.

to make wine

Etymology

NLem mind‑a
LMLem mind‑yr
MLem mindu‑yr ‘mead’
OLem mindu‑
PLem *mendu‑
PIE *mĂ©dÊ°u

Cognates

Eng mead, Gk ΌέΞυ ‘wine’

mĂ jw.

to feel affection for someone-acc, to show someone-dat one’s affection

Etymology

NLem, LMLem, MLem manw‑a
OLem manw‑
PLem *manw‑, nĂ©uÌŻ-present of
PIE *men‑ ‘think’

The PLem semantic development is explained with the notion of thinking about someone softly, fondly, or the like.

doublet of manwà. ‘magnetically attract’, màsw., minà. and swmilà.

Cognates

Gk ÎŒÎœÎŹÎżÎŒÎ±Îč ‘remember’, Lat mēns ‘mind, reason’

mĂ c.

to make full, to fill something-dat with something-acc, to fill something-acc into something-dat;
acc: to fill something-dat (enter something to make it full)

Etymology

NLem mec‑a
LMLem, MLem mec‑yr
OLem mezhk‑ ‘large’
PLem *mezhx‑
PIE *mĂ©g̑h₂‑s

Cognates

Eng much, Gk ÎŒÎ­ÎłÎ±Ï‚ ‘large’

mĂ z.

to make flies

Etymology

NLem mezr‑a
LMLem mùsur‑yr
MLem meesur‑yr
OLem mēsur‑
PLem *mew‑sor‑, feminine of
  PLem *mew‑
PIE *mĂ©uÌŻâ€‘s

Cognates

Lat musca ‘fly’, possibly Eng midge

mĂ zd.

to make fat (the substance)

Etymology

NLem mazd‑a
LMLem, MLem mazd‑yr
OLem mazd‑ ‘fat’ [mainly of animals]
PLem *mazd‑, Narten present of
PIE *masd‑ ‘be(come) fat’

Cognates

Ved mĂ©dyati ‘be(come) fat’, possibly Gk Όαζός ‘breast’

mĂ v.

to act, speak, think wisely, to make/produce wisdom, wise deeds, sayings, thoughts

mĂšv. also the constellation Ophiuchus (see appendix, Constellations)

Etymology

NLem mev‑a
LMLem, MLem mev‑yr
OLem medh‑ ‘measure, look after, enforce’
PLem *medh‑, Narten present of
PIE *med‑

Cognates

Ger messen ‘measure’ (but not Eng measure), Gk ÎŒÎźÎŽÎżÎŒÎ±Îč ‘contrive, devise, plot’

mĂ w.

to make muscle, flesh, meat (of animals, including humans)

Usage notes

Technically, this word refers to muscle flesh, i.e. the part of the flesh or meat without the visible fat. In practice, however, the fat is the best part of it.

Etymology

NLem mem‑a
LMLem mùm‑yr
MLem meem‑yr ‘meat, flesh’
OLem mēm‑
PLem *mēm‑
PIE *mᾗms

Cognates

Eng membrane (via Lat mem‑brāna ‘skin, membrane’), OCS męso ‘meat’

mĂ wd.

to work as a waiter

mĂŹwd. a guest, a customer (in a restaurant)

Etymology

NLem mowdR‑a
LMLem, MLem anbnowdlz‑ar ‘lieutenant’
Ghe aspxʱofᮛsˡ‑ā /anbʱɎɔÎČdÌ ËĄz̟ʌː/

mĂ xk.

to lie to someone-dat about something-acc, to deceive with words (ditto);
timber: to creak without anyone stepping on it

Usage notes

From Late Middle Lemizh onwards, people have said that timbers are ‘lying’ to describe their creaking noises due to wind and temperature changes; this is because the timber falsely acts as if some intruder were in the house.

Etymology

NLem mexk‑a
LMLem mùxk‑a
MLem meexk‑a
OLem mēçk‑
PLem *māçx‑ ‘lengthen, stretch’, root present of
PIE *meh₂k̑‑eh₂‑ ‘make long’, de-adjectival factitive verb of
  PIE *meh₂k̑‑ ‘long’

The modern meaning developed from the notion of ‘stretching the truth’.

Cognates

Eng macro- (via Gk ΌαÎșρός ‘long, far’)

mĂ h.

to sort something-dat into something-acc, to group something-dat according to type (see unit 7, Grouping numerals)

Etymology

NLem, LMLem, MLem mih‑a, back formation of
  MLem mihk‑a ‘mix’
OLem mishk‑
PLem *mishk‑, sk̑-present of
PIE *meiÌŻk̑‑

MLem reinterpreted the stem-final k as opposition negator, innovating mih‑a ‘the opposite of mixing, unmixing = sorting’.

doublet of mĂ hk. and hnĂ xt.

Cognates

Eng mix, Lat misceƍ ‘mix’

mĂ hk.

to make salad(s)

Etymology

NLem mihk‑a
LMLem mihk‑yr, nominalisation of
MLem mihk‑a ‘mix’
OLem mishk‑
PLem *mishk‑, sk̑-present of
PIE *meiÌŻk̑‑

doublet of mĂ h. and hnĂ xt.

Cognates

Eng mix, Lat misceƍ ‘mix’

mĂ s.

to make mice (also computer mice)

Etymology

NLem mUs‑a
LMLem, MLem mUs‑yr
OLem mĂŒs‑
PLem *mĆ«s‑
PIE *mĂșh₂s

The meaning ‘computer mouse’ is calqued from Br lač.

Cognates

Eng mouse, Lat mĆ«s ‘mouse’

mĂ sk.

to act wittily, to make/produce witty deeds, sayings, thoughts

Usage notes

Talking wittily can be seen as concealing one’s intentions or feelings, as in the phrase esfàs màski. ‘hide behind [one’s] wit’.

Etymology

NLem mask‑a
LMLem, MLem mnask‑a ‘think’
OLem mnask‑
PLem *mnask‑, sk̑-present of
PIE *mneh₂‑

Cognates

Gk ÎŒÎœáœ±ÎżÎŒÎ±Îč ‘think of, woo’, Ved ā‑manati ‘mentions, hands down’

mĂ st.

self-transporting: to visit someone-dat

Etymology

NLem mist‑a
LMLem, MLem mizt‑yr ‘reward’
OLem mizt‑
PLem *mizt‑
PIE *misdÊ°h₁‑ós ‘reward, wages’

The PIE noun is probably derived from *dʰeh₁‑ ‘put, make’.

Cognates

Gk ÎŒÎčσΞός ‘reward, wages, pay’, Ger Miete ‘rent’

mĂ sw.

to make owls

Usage notes

The owl has been used as a metaphor for people who like to stay up late since Early New Lemizh, especially quiet, cautious ones. See also pevrÌ. ‘lark’.

Etymology

NLem mesw‑a
LMLem, MLem minesw‑yr
OLem minesw‑ ‘Goddess of wisdom’
PLem *menesw‑
PIE *men‑ésuÌŻâ€‘eh₂, nominalisation of
  PIE *men‑ ‘think’

The word appears to have been used metonymically for owls already in OLem.

doublet of manwĂ ., mĂ jw., minĂ . and smwilĂ .

Cognates

Gk ÎŒÎœÎŹÎżÎŒÎ±Îč ‘remember’, Lat Minerva

mĂ qk.

dat: can (have the opportunity to) do something-acc;
to give someone-dat the opportunity to do something-acc (see unit 13, Overview of the modals)

Etymology

NLem, LMLem, MLem miqk‑a
OLem mithk‑ ‘send someone on a quest, give someone an opportunity’
PLem *mithx‑ ‘remote, far’, o-stem adjective of
PIE *meiÌŻth₂‑ ‘change, remove’

Cognates

Lat mittƍ ‘send, release’, Ger meiden ‘avoid’

mĂ qx.

to shine at something-dat (only of stars)

mĂšqx. star
mÌqx. starlight

memqxxalĂš. Antares, the star α Scorpii (⇐ ⇔ mĂšqx xalÌem. ‘the star like an apple; the Apple Star’)

Etymology

NLem miqxp‑a
LMLem miqxp‑ar
MLem miqxpe‑ar, haplology of
OLem mithxpeir‑
PLem *mithx‑pāwar‑ ‘remote or far shining fire; star?’, compound of
  PLem *mithx‑ ‘remote, far’, o-stem adjective of
PIE *meiÌŻth₂‑ ‘change, remove’
 —and—
  PLem *pāwar‑ ‘fire’ [inanimate]
PIE *pĂ©h₂uÌŻrÌ„

Cognates

Lat mittƍ ‘send, release’, Ger meiden ‘avoid’; Eng fire

meuxĂ .

to make acorns

meuxĂš. oak
meuxÌ. acorn

Etymology

gender change of
NLem meuxes‑a
Besk mÀuxÀs
PCelt *messu, of unknown origin

This is one of many Beskidic tree names introduced in the TlöngĂ¶Ì€l. ‘Female’ (zero) poststems are almost universal in trees.

Cognates

Wel mes ‘acorns’, possibly Eng mast ‘fruit of forest trees’

melĂ j.

to make temples (the regions of the head)

Usage notes

The temples were regarded as the location of the RĂšg. (soul, dĂŠmon) particularly in LMLem times. They are still associated with positive, friendly, soft traits of a person.

That your temples hurt when your RĂšg. is unhappy is probably just a superstition.

Etymology

poststem from plural of
NLem mel‑a
LMLem mitnùl‑yr
MLem mitne‑el‑yr, nominalisation, diminutive of
  MLem mit‑ne‑a ‘sleep’, compound of
  MLem mit‑a ‘wake’
OLem mit‑ ‘awake’
PLem *mis‑, o-stem adjective of
PIE *meiÌŻs‑ ‘open one’s eyes’
 —and—
  MLem ne‑a ‘not’
OLem ne‑, inflected form of
PLem *ne
PIE *ne ‘no, not’

doublet of mĂ t.

Cognates

Ved miáčŁĂĄti ‘opens the eyes’; Eng no

melĂ s.

to make a power unit, a power of 2.813 milliwatts (see appendix, Units of measurement)

Etymology

NLem meliss‑a, academic loan of
Koi ÎŒáœłÎ»Îčσσ‑α ‘bee’
SHell *melilíkhi‑ā
PIE *melidlĂ­g̑ʰ‑i‑eh₂, nominalisation of
  PIE *mĂ©lid‑leiÌŻg̑ʰ‑, compound of
  PIE *mĂ©lid ‘honey’
 —and—
  PIE *leiÌŻg̑ʰ‑ ‘lick’

An old unit of power was named after the more impressive horse (Koi áŒ”Ï€Ï€ÎżÏ‚), but (1) the symbol x was needed for the length unit, (2) 2.8 milliwatts are closer to a bee’s than to a horse’s power output, and (3) one of the physicists who devised the modern unit system had a wife called ΜέλÎčσσα.

doublet of lĂ j.

Cognates

Eng mil‑dew, Lat mel ‘honey’; Eng lick

memĂ .

to become a mum(my)-nom

memĂš. mum(my) of someone-acc

Etymology

baby talk for mesù. ‘mother’

mesĂ .

to give birth to a child-acc

mesĂš. mother of someone-acc
mesÌ. child (son, daughter) of a mother-nom; native to somewhere-loc/sce

mesortÌ. native (without specification of the homeland)

Etymology

NLem mes‑a
LMLem mùs‑yr ‘child (of someone)’
MLem mees‑yr, haplology of
OLem mēsir‑
PLem *māser‑ ‘mother’
PIE *mĂ©h₂ter‑s

Cognates

Eng mother, Gk Ό᜔τηρ ‘mother’

minĂ .

to make the goddess Minerva/Athena; to make the dwarf planet Pluto

Usage notes

See djeipysrĂ d. for some information on Lemizh polytheism.

Etymology

gender change of
NLem minesw‑a, academic loan of
OLem minesw‑ ‘Goddess of wisdom’
PLem *menesw‑
PIE *men‑ésuÌŻâ€‘eh₂, nominalisation of
  PIE *men‑ ‘think’

Pluto was named for the owl-eyed Athena because owl’s eyes are needed to spot it. Later, it turned out that she had not only wisdom but also a great heart.

doublet of manwĂ ., mĂ jw., mĂ sw. and smwilĂ .

Cognates

Gk ÎŒÎœÎŹÎżÎŒÎ±Îč ‘remember’, Lat Minerva

mlĂ .

to make several individuals

Etymology

NLem mal‑a
LMLem, MLem mimal‑yl ‘separate’ [nominal]
OLem mimalk‑ ‘crush, separate’
PLem *memalx‑ ‘grind’, e-reduplicated athematic present of
PIE *melh₂‑

Cognates

Ger mahlen ‘grind’, Eng molar [tooth] (via Lat molƍ ‘grind’)

mlĂ tx.

to melt something-dat; dat: to melt

Etymology

NLem maltx‑a
LMLem, MLem maltk‑a
OLem maltk‑
PLem *maltk‑, sk̑-present of
PIE *meld‑ ‘soften’

Cognates

Eng melt, Ger schmelzen ‘melt’

mlĂ v.

to make sweet, to sweeten, to make sweets

mlùv. oxygen (symbol: Γ)
mlĂčv. sweetener

Etymology

NLem mliv‑a
LMLem, MLem miliv‑yr
OLem milidh‑
PLem *melidh‑ ‘honey’
PIE *mélid

Cognates

Eng mil‑dew, Lat mel ‘honey’

mlĂ w.

agentive ins: to copy something-nom about something-acc somewhere-dat (like non-sending ‘read’ in unit 14, Objects related to language)

Etymology

metathesis of
NLem l‑mem‑a, clarifying compound of
  NLem, LMLem, MLem l‑a ‘do’
Ghe ᮛˡ‑a /dÌ ËĄa/
 —and—
  NLem mem‑a ‘copy’
LMLem mùmun‑yr ‘monkey’
MLem meimun‑yr
OTroy ÎŒÎčÎŒáżĄÎœâ€‘Ï‚ /ˈme͜imuːns/, from an Asian language

Cognates

Ar مَيْمُون ‘baboon, mandrill’; probably unrelated to Eng mime

mRĂ kh.

to make centaurs (also the constellation consisting of Centaurus and Crux; see appendix, Constellations)

Etymology

NLem muRkx‑a ‘a mythological horse’
Besk muƕkx ‘horse’
PCelt *márk‑os
PIE *márk‑os ‘wild horse’

In the TlöngĂ¶Ì€l, this word refers to a mythological talking horse of allegedly Celtic origin. It has since replaced the native Lemizh word for ‘centaur’, NLem axr‑ehw‑y (lit. ‘horse-man’).

Cognates

Eng mare, Wel march ‘horse’

mrĂ .

to make seas

Etymology

NLem mur‑a
LMLem mur‑yr
MLem muri‑yr
OLem muri‑
PLem *mori‑
PIE *móri ‘sea, lake’

Cognates

Ger Meer ‘sea’, Ir muir ‘sea’

mraĂ .

to paint, apply paint to something-dat with some colour, pattern, motif etc.-acc;
to paint some pattern, motif, picture etc.-acc somewhere-dat etc.

mraĂč. (paint)brush

mrauxĂčxs. paint roller (⇐ xÌxs mraĂčy. ‘rotating/rolling brush’)

Etymology

gender change of
NLem mraixts‑a
Besk mraixts ‘painted, colourful’
PCelt *mrixt‑ós
PIE *mrÌ„gʷ‑t‑ós ‘dark, coloured’, verbal adjective of
  PIE *mergʷ‑ ‘colour’

Cognates

Wel brith ‘speckled’

mrĂ gz.

to act tetchily, in a hurt or bewildered way, in order to sneakishly get the better of someone-acc/dat

Etymology

NLem margz‑a
LMLem, MLem margjw‑yr ‘short-tempered’
OLem margjw‑
PLem *margjw‑, u-stem adjective of
PIE *mreg̑ʰ‑ ‘short’

Cognates

Eng mirth, Lat brevis ‘short, small, shallow’

mrĂ j.

to make 65536 individuals

Etymology

shortening, poststem from plural of
NLem mra‑a
LMLem mUrià‑yr
Koi ΌυρÎčᜱ‑ς ‘ten thousand, countless numbers’, nominalisation of
  Koi ÎŒÏ…ÏÎŻâ€‘ÎżÏ‚ ‘countless’, of uncertain origin

This is a (probably academic) loan from the Greek word for 10,000, modelled after skmà. ‘256’, originally ‘100’.

Cognates

Eng myriad

mrĂ w.

to celebrate something-acc/caus; celebration

Etymology

NLem marw‑a
LMLem, MLem mindudarw‑a ‘gather for entertainment’
OLem mindu‑darw‑ ‘gather for entertainment’, lit. ‘drink mead and dance (?)’, compound of
  OLem mindu‑ ‘mead’
PLem *mendu‑
PIE *mĂ©dÊ°u
 —and—
  OLem darw‑ ‘dance’
PLem *darw‑, u-present of
PIE *dreuÌŻâ€‘ ‘run’

Cognates

Eng mead; Ved drávati ‘runs’

gĂ .

to informally greet someone-dat, to say goodbye to someone-dat; an informal greeting, ‘Hello! Hi! Bye!’ etc. (gesture: 🖖 for the letter g)

Etymology

originally spelt g–à., this is a shortened form of gcrà., the more formal variant of greeting

ganĂ .

to sing to someone-dat about something-acc

ganĂ m. something like singing (humorously used to refer to very bad singing)

Etymology

NLem, LMLem, MLem gan‑a
OLem kan‑
PLem *kan‑, Narten present of
PIE *kan‑

Funnily, the native word for singing survived Ramo’s attempt in the TlöngĂ¶Ì€l to replace it with its doublet khnĂ ., a Beskidic loanword, while the latter came to mean ‘shout’.

Cognates

Lat canƍ ‘sing’, Ir can ‘sing’

gĂ d.

to make whales

gydpÌsk. Cetus (see appendix, Constellations)

Etymology

NLem ged‑a
LMLem gùd‑yr
MLem geed‑yr ‘whale, sea monster’
OTroy ÎșÎ·Ï„â€‘ÎżÏ‚ /ˈɥeːdos/
SHell *káșœt‑os, of unknown origin

Cognates

Gk Îșáż†Ï„â€‘ÎżÏ‚ ‘whale’

gĂ b.

to take up with or spike on a fork

gĂčb. a fork

Usage notes

The meaning of this word covers the eating, gardening and farming tools, but not other objects of similar shapes such as road forks.

Etymology

NLem gabl‑a
LMLem, MLem gabl‑yr
PCelt *gábl‑ā
PIE *gÊ°h̄́₁b‑l‑eh₂ ‘a farming tool’, instrumental noun of
  PIE *gÊ°eh₁b‑ ‘grab, take’

doublet of RĂ jb.

Cognates

Lat habeƍ ‘have, hold’ (but not Eng have), Ir gabhlóg ‘fork’

gĂ jd.

to act competently, beneficially or ethically, to make good (beneficial, of high quality, ethically sound)

gyjdùk. brand of air conditioner (⇐ ⇔ Ìk gÌjdy. ‘make the air good’; see also srywdùk.)

Etymology

NLem gundr‑a
LMLem, MLem gundr‑yr
OLem kundr‑ ‘clean’
PLem *kundr‑, r-stem adjective of
PIE *k̑euÌŻdʰ‑ ‘become clean’

Cognates

Ved ƛundhati ‘cleans’

gĂ cx.

to make grain(s), fruit of cereal plants

gĂšcx. cereal plant

Usage notes

This word is used strictly for edible types of grass such as wheat, maize and barley, not for other plants such as buckwheat or quinoa.

Etymology

NLem garxn‑a
LMLem, MLem garxn‑yr
OLem garxn‑
PLem *garxn‑
PIE *g̑rÌ„h₂‑n‑óm, n-stem noun of
  PIE *g̑erh₂‑ ‘make/grow(?) old, mature’

doublet of grĂ k.

Cognates

Eng grain, Gk ÎłáœłÏÏ‰Îœ ‘old man’

gonĂ tx.

to run museums

gonĂČrtx. museum (building, site)

Etymology

  ModLem pry‑gonĂ tx., reanalysis of
  ModLem prigonĂ tx.
NLem prigounts‑a ‘fine art’
Besk prigĂ„unts ‘the High One (Goddess of art)’
PCelt *brigant‑ī
PIE *bÊ°rÌ„gÌ‘Ê°Ă©nt‑ih₂, feminine of
  PIE *bÊ°Ă©rg̑ʰ‑ont‑s ‘high’, nt-stem adjective of
  PIE *bÊ°erg̑ʰ‑ ‘rise’

The motivation for the reanalysis of pri- ~ pry- as the temporal/spatial verb prÌ. ‘front’ is not quite clear.

doublet of bvyrgcĂ .

Cognates

Eng Brigid (via Ir Brighid)

gomĂ s.

to make a power density unit, a power density of 0.3322 watts per square metre (see appendix, Units of measurement)

Etymology

academic loan of
Koi ÎłáœčÎŒâ€‘ÎżÏ‚ ‘cargo’
SHell *góm‑os, nominalisation of
  SHell *gĂ©m‑ƍ ‘be full(y loaded)’, full-grade thematic present of
PIE *gem‑ ‘seize, grab’

Cognates

TochB kamāte ‘carried’

glĂ t.

to handle a sword,
to fight (against) someone-dat with a sword,
to cut something-dat into something-acc [e.g. pieces, in two] with a sword

glĂčt. sword

Etymology

gender change of
NLem dal‑a
LMLem, MLem dal‑ar
OLem dalh‑ ‘hew, split’
PLem *dalh‑, root present of
PIE *delh₁‑

Cognates

Lat doleƍ ‘hurt, suffer’, Lit delĂč ‘wear out, diminish’

glĂ xw.

to be comically amused by someone or something-acc/causal-transporting (also dat/causal-receiving; see unit 3, Ambiguous usage);
caus, causal-reflexive: to comically amuse someone-nom, to be amusing/funny to/for someone-nom

Etymology

NLem dluxw‑a ‘tasty > amusing’
LMLem, MLem dluxw‑yr ‘tasty’
OLem dluhw‑
PLem *dluhw‑, u-stem adjective of
PIE *dlĂ©uÌŻk‑ ‘sweet’

Cognates

Gk ÎłÎ»Ï…Îșύς ‘sweet’, Lat dulcis ‘sweet’

glĂ st.

to make (colour) violet, purple (any hue between magenta and blue)

glilstkĂ . to make lime green, yellow-green

glystnÌs. iodine (symbol: Ι)
glistvnĂš. rubidium (symbol: Ια) (⇐ vnĂš glĂŹste. ‘making fire violet’)

Usage notes

There is an enzyme called GLAST in the MĂŒller glia of the eye’s retina.

A gamma-ray space observatory has been termed GLAST, after the short wavelengths of violet light. And of course there is EGRET.

Etymology

NLem dlost‑a ‘lavender’ [a painter’s term for the specific hue of a valued type of lavender]
LMLem ydlàstt‑yr ‘lavender’ [colour]
MLem ydlaystt‑yr
Ghe əᮛˡaəstt‑ə̄ /ədÌ ËĄa͜əs̟ttɯː/

glĂ f.

to make coils, rolls; to coil, roll something-dat up

Etymology

NLem dlUf‑a ‘coil’
LMLem, MLem adlif‑a
Ghe atËĄifⁿ‑a /adËĄÉȘÉža/

grĂ .

to make difficult

grĂšl. a cause of difficulty, an obstacle

Etymology

NLem grO‑a ‘difficult(y)’
LMLem kurtrù‑yr ‘war’
MLem kurtree‑yr
OLem kurtrē‑
PLem *kor‑trew‑ ‘war camp’, compound of
  PLem *kor‑ ‘war’
PIE *kór‑os
 —and—
  PLem *trew‑ ‘dwelling’
PIE *trĂ©b‑s

Cognates

Ger Heer ‘army’; Ger Dorf ‘village’

grĂ bv.

to carve something-acc from something-dat

Etymology

NLem, LMLem, MLem garbw‑a
OLem garbw‑
PLem *garbw‑, root present of
PIE *gerbʰ‑ ‘carve, notch’

doublet of grĂ w.

Cognates

Eng carve, Lit gerbiĂč ‘honour’ (< â€˜speak’ < â€˜count’ < â€˜number’ < â€˜notch’)

grĂ k.

to make trousers

Etymology

gender change of
NLem ger‑a ‘kind of garment for adults’
LMLem gùr‑yr, nominalisation of
MLem geer‑a ‘make old, mature’
OLem gēr‑
PLem *gēr‑ ‘make/grow(?) old, mature’, Narten present of
PIE *g̑erh₂‑

doublet of gĂ cx.

Cognates

Gk ÎłáœłÏÏ‰Îœ ‘old man’, Ved jĂĄranti ‘let grow old’

grĂ t.

to make carrots

Etymology

NLem grot‑a
LMLem karĂČt‑yr
Koi ÎșÎ±Ïáż¶Ï„â€‘ÎżÎœ, of uncertain origin

doublet of grĂ tf.

Cognates

Eng carrot

grĂ tf.

to make root vegetables

Etymology

probably a fossilised qualitative of approximation of
NLem grot‑a ‘carrot’
LMLem karĂČt‑yr
Koi ÎșÎ±Ïáż¶Ï„â€‘ÎżÎœ, of uncertain origin

doublet of grĂ t.

Cognates

Eng carrot

grĂ c.

to make chickens; (physics) to make quarks

Usage notes

The chicken is proverbial for ‘making’ something, namely eggs. mà grÌcem. ‘make/build something, like a chicken’, (where mà. can absorb an accusative object) in the sense of ‘make/build something thoroughly, consistently’ (not necessarily at high speed) is attested since Late Middle Lemizh.

Etymology

NLem grOr‑a
LMLem, MLem gyrter‑yr
OLem gyrter‑ ‘rooster’
PLem *garter‑
PIE *g̑r̄‑tĂ©r‑s, non-event agent of
  PIE *g̑ar‑ ‘sound, call’

Quarks have been termed ‘chickens’ by an imaginative West Lemizh physicist allegedly because they make [up] round things such as protons and neutrons. The term has been calqued into many languages, such as Gk Îșáœčτα or Br kork (< PCelt *kerkā).

Cognates

Gk Îłáż†ÏÏ…Ï‚ ‘voice’; but Eng care is questionable

grĂ w.

to make threads

Etymology

NLem grom‑a ‘(woollen) thread’
LMLem gramm‑yr ‘line’
Koi ÎłÏÎ±ÎŒÎŒâ€‘áœ”, nominalisation of
  Koi ÎłÏáœ±Ï†â€‘Ï‰ ‘draw, write’
SHell *gráph‑ƍ ‘carve, notch’, root present of
PIE *gerbʰ‑

doublet of grĂ bv.

Cognates

Eng carve, graphic (the latter via Gk)

grĂ ws.

to make rats

Etymology

NLem grOms‑a
LMLem kurtrùmUs‑yr
MLem kurtreemUs‑yr
OLem kurtrē‑mĂŒs‑, compound of
  OLem kurtrē‑ ‘war’
PLem *kor‑trew‑ ‘war camp’, compound of
  PLem *kor‑ ‘war’
PIE *kór‑os
 —and—
  PLem *trew‑ ‘dwelling’
PIE *trĂ©b‑s
 —and—
  OLem mĂŒs‑ ‘mouse’
PLem *mĆ«s‑
PIE *mĂșh₂s

The OLem word, probably an epithet or a taboo avoidance term, literally means ‘war-mouse’.

Cognates

Ger Heer ‘army’; Eng mouse

grosĂ .

to make cherries

grosĂš. cherry tree
grosÌ. cherry

Usage notes

Attested since Early New Lemizh, the cherry orchard or grosĂČr. is a metaphor for an otherworldly, beneficial place full of rich, thick colours, sounds and smells; somewhat akin to the Garden of Eden of our mythology. This metaphor is so gross that the sanity of the Early New Lemizh has been questioned on its basis.

Etymology

NLem gros‑a
LMLem, MLem keras‑yr ‘sweet cherry (tree)’
OLem kiras‑ ‘sweet cherry (fruit)’
PLem *keras‑ ‘sweet cherry (tree)’, of unknown origin

Cognates

Eng cherry (via Gk ÎșΔρασός ‘sweet cherry (tree)’, likely a LMLem loan)

grUrĂ .

to make the river Dniester

Etymology

NLem grUr‑a
LMLem argUr‑yr
MLem arg‑Ur‑yr, compound of
  MLem arg‑ar ‘river’
OLem arg‑ ‘flow, drip’
PLem *arg‑, root present of
PIE *reg̑‑
 —and—
  MLem Ur‑yr ‘right’ [direction]
OLem ĂŒr‑
PLem *Ć«r‑, r-stem adjective of
PIE *uÌŻeg̑‑ ‘lively, strong’

Expected would be ModLem **grĂ c., but poststem formation was inhibited by the fact that rivers are mythologically female, as in other PIE languages.

The ‘left’ river is the Dnieper.

Cognates

Ice raki ‘moisture, dampness’; Eng wake, vigour (via Lat vigeƍ ‘thrive, flourish’)

gmĂ .

to make points / an area outside something-nom (see unit 12, Temporal and spatial verbs)

Etymology

NLem gom‑a, inflected form of
LMLem, MLem gom
OLem kom ‘with’
PLem, PIE *kom

Cognates

Lat cum ‘with’

gmĂ j.

to pray, call upon someone-dat saying something-acc

Usage notes

While this verb can mean addressing a human, it sounds excessively docile in that usage.

Etymology

NLem gmin‑a
LMLem, MLem gUmin‑a
OLem gĂŒmin‑ ‘prayer, invocation’
PLem *gĆ«men‑ ‘one called upon (e.g. a god)’
PIE *guh₂‑mh̄₁n‑ós ‘called’, root present mediopassive participle of
  PIE *geuÌŻh₂‑ ‘call’

Cognates

Gk ÎłÎżáœ±Ï‰ ‘(be)wail’, Ved jĂłguve ‘call upon repeatedly’

gmĂ w.

to honour someone-dat

Usage notes

Today, the Lemizh usually honour people for their qualities, abilities or deeds. Quite often even for the right ones.

In Early New Lemizh times, honour was frequently associated with social status and heritage, like a large property of land. This view, thankfully, is on the decline.

Etymology

NLem gmim‑a
LMLem, MLem gomem‑yr ‘qualities, abilities (of someone)’
OLem kom‑hem‑ ‘bag, bundle’, compound of
  OLem kom ‘with’
PLem, PIE *kom
 —and—
  OLem hem‑ ‘take’
PLem *hem‑, Narten present of
PIE *h₁em‑

Cognates

Lat cum ‘with’; Lat emƍ ‘take’

gmrĂ .

to make warm, to warm

gmrilcĂčwb. freezer
gmrilcrĂč. refrigerator

Etymology

NLem gmr‑a
LMLem gmr‑yr
MLem gmru‑yr
OLem gmru‑
PLem *gmru‑, u-stem adjective of
PIE *gʷʰer‑ ‘get warm’

doublet of qĂ c.

Cognates

Eng thermo-meter (via Gk ΞΔρΌ‑áœčς), but perhaps not warm (see frĂ c.)

gcĂ .

to make fifteen individuals

Usage notes

Historically, 15 was the number of ministers in the Lemizh monarchy. gcÌ. ‘the Fifteen’ is still used pars pro toto for the (or any) government. See also omùj. ‘councillor’.

Etymology

NLem gj‑a
LMLem, MLem gj‑yl
Ghe qËĄâ€‘É™Ì„ /ɹˠɯː/

gcrĂ .

to greet, welcome someone-dat to someplace-sce, to say farewell, goodbye to someone-dat; a greeting or farewell, ‘How do you do? Good morning/afternoon/evening/night! Goodbye!’ etc.

Usage notes

While this verb used to be reserved for welcome greetings until recent times, it is now used as a fairly universal greeting, also for farewells. The informal variant is gĂ ..

Etymology

NLem gjor‑a, syncope of
LMLem, MLem gjisor‑a ‘welcome, show respect’
OLem gjisor‑
PLem *gjesor‑ ‘hand’
PIE *gÌ‘Ê°Ă©s‑or‑s, r-stem noun of
  PIE *g̑ʰes‑ ‘grip’

doublet of jĂ s. and xrĂ .

Cognates

Eng chiro‑practic (via Koi), TochB áčŁar ‘hand’

gcnĂ jg.

to deceive someone-dat about something-acc

Usage notes

This verb is more general than màxk. ‘deceive with words, lie’ and is therefore mostly used for non-verbal kinds of deceit.

Etymology

NLem gjnung‑a
LMLem, MLem gjingung‑a ‘make harmless trickeries, cheat’
OLem gjingung‑ ‘cuckoo’s egg > harmless trickery, cheating’
PLem *gjengung‑ ‘cuckoo’
PIE *gÌ‘Ê°Ă©gÊ°ug̑ʰ‑eh₂, probably onomatopoetic

See also kukà. ‘cuckoo’.

Cognates

Eng gawk, Ice gaukur ‘cuckoo’

gzlĂ s.

to make/found countries, sovereign states

Etymology

NTroy ÎŸÎżÎ»Ïƒ /ˈɥzuls/
OTroy Ï„Ï€ÎżÎ»Îč‑ς /ˈdbo͜ulis/ ‘fortification’
SHell *tpóli‑s
PIE *tpólh₁i‑s

doublet of splĂ j.

Cognates

Eng police (via Gk πόλÎčς ‘city’)

gwĂ .

indefinite pronoun: to make someone/anyone, something/anything (see unit 6, Demonstrative pronouns)

gwÌ. someone/anyone, somebody/anybody, something/anything;
with outer causative/persuasive: for some/any reason;
with outer temporal: some/any time;
with outer locative: somewhere/anywhere;
etc.

Etymology

NLem gw‑a
LMLem, MLem gw‑yr ‘someone, anyone’
OLem gw‑
PLem *gw‑
PIE *kÊ·â€‘Ăłs ‘who?’

Cognates

Eng who, what, Lat quis, quid ‘who, what’

gwalpĂ .

to make cups (also the constellation Crater; see appendix, Constellations)

Etymology

NLem gwalp‑a
LMLem, MLem gwalp‑yr
OLem gwalp‑
PLem *gwalp‑ ‘curved > cup, bowl’, o-stem adjective of
PIE *kuÌŻelp‑ ‘bend, bulge’

Cognates

Ger wölben ‘curve, bulge’

gwĂ b.

to make healthy, to heal someone-dat

gwĂčb. remedy (medicine/appliance/treatment against a disease)

Etymology

NLem gwibl‑a
LMLem gwìbl‑a ‘be healthy’
MLem gwiiblu‑a ‘be well, healthy, in good shape’
OLem gwī‑blu‑, compound of
  OLem gwī‑ ‘live’
PLem *gwī‑, root present of
PIE *gÊ·iÌŻeh₃‑
 —and—
  OLem blu‑ ‘strong’
PLem *blu‑, u-stem adjective of
PIE *bel‑

Cognates

Lat vÄ«vƍ ‘live’; Gk ÎČÎ”Î»Ï„ÎŻÏ‰Îœ ‘better’

gwĂ k.

to make oxen

Etymology

gender change of
NLem gwo‑a ‘cow’
LMLem gwĂČ‑yr
MLem gwou‑yr
OLem gwou‑
PLem *gwow‑
PIE *gÊ·ĂłuÌŻâ€‘s

Cognates

Eng cow, Gk ÎČÎżáżŠÏ‚ ‘cow, ox, cattle’

gwĂ t.

to teach someone-dat something-acc; something-acc to someone-dat (the latter can be translated as a progressive aspect);
dat: to learn about something-acc (with inner non-fact, e.g. aff for actions); dat: doing something-acc (with inner fact);
dat, perfect: to know about something-acc (with inner non-fact); dat, perfect: to know how to do something-acc, can do, be able to do something-acc (with inner fact)

gwattĂ kf. teach specifically at university

Etymology

NLem, LMLem, MLem gwet‑a
OLem gwet‑
PLem *gwesh‑ ‘know’, Narten present of
PIE *kʷek̑‑ ‘see’

Cognates

Ved ĂĄkhyat ‘has seen, has looked’, OCS kaĆŸÇ« ‘show, admonish’

gwĂ j.

to grind something-dat into something-acc [e.g. into parts, into dust]; to deform something-dat into some shape-acc using shear stress

Usage notes

The ‘destroying’ and ‘deforming’ meanings are distinguished by the acc object or – often simpler – by instead using a nominal verb expressing a shape, versus nominal verbs such as skràp. ‘split, turn into parts’, dwà. ‘turn into two [parts]’, etc.

Etymology

NLem, LMLem, MLem gwaln‑a
OLem gwalnh‑ ‘turn’
PLem *gwalnh‑, nasal-infix present of
PIE *kʷelh₁‑ ‘turn (around)’

doublet of polnĂ . and possible doublet of telmĂ .

Cognates

Gk ÎșύÎșÎ»ÎżÏ‚ ‘cycle’, Ger dulden ‘tolerate, endure’

gwĂ h.

to trick, swindle someone-dat

Etymology

NLem gweh‑a
LMLem, MLem gwehh‑a
OLem gweshsh‑
PWald *gvéƥƥ‑a ‘birdlime’
PIE *uÌŻĂ©iÌŻk̑s‑eh₂ ‘mistletoe’

The PWald word was loaned as a means of ‘tricking’ the birds.

doublet of wĂ hs.

Cognates

Ger Weichsel ‘sour cherry’, Lat viscum ‘mistletoe’

gwĂ s.

to make cheese

Etymology

NLem gwas‑a
LMLem, MLem gwas‑yr
OLem gwas‑
PLem *gwas‑ ‘fermented, sour > cheese’, o-stem adjective of
PIE *kuÌŻh₂et‑ ‘ferment, become sour’

Cognates

Eng cheese (via Lat cāseus ‘cheese’), OCS kvasƭ ‘leaven’

gwĂ sk.

to be careful, cautious, attentive to error or harm, to act carefully, to take care

Usage notes

This word does not express ‘careful’ in the sense of ‘thorough, painstaking’.

Etymology

NLem gwisk‑a
LMLem, MLem gwisk‑ar
OLem gwisk‑ ‘(be) careful’
PLem *gwisk‑, sk̑-present of
PIE *kÊ·eiÌŻs‑ ‘perceive, pay attention’

Cognates

Eng cure (via Lat cĆ«ra ‘care’), Ir (Munster) chĂ­ ‘see’

gwĂ q.

to make four individuals

‘make four’, a version of an old language game for four players, focusing on abstract thought. Other versions of this game are for five, seven or ten players, and named accordingly. The cover term for the game is dmĂ j. ‘fill (up), make full > make quite a lot’.

Usage notes

As in other traditions, four is the number of the physical world (Earth, or the cosmos). This metaphor, which is probably based on the four cardinal points of the compass, the four classical elements, and other concepts, is attested from Proto-Lemizh. As far as we know, the Lemizh always have had a positive attitude towards this world (and thus to the number four) and identified more with their bodies than with their psyches, similar to the Greeks.

Etymology

NLem gwiq‑a
LMLem, MLem gwiq‑yl
OLem gwith‑, inflected form of
PLem *gwethwores
PIE *kÊ·Ă©tuÌŻores

Cognates

Eng four, Gk τέτταρΔς ‘four’

gwlĂ .

to blaze (of fire); dat: to blaze (of an object)

Etymology

NLem, LMLem, MLem gwal‑a
OLem gwalh‑ ‘burn, blaze’
PLem *gwalh‑, root present of
PIE *g̑uÌŻelh₁‑

doublet of gwlĂ k.

Cognates

Ved jvĂĄlati ‘burn’, Lit ĆŸvá»čla ‘glitter’

gwlĂ k.

to make coal

gwlykhÌc. carbon (symbol: Α)

Etymology

gender change of
NLem gwel‑a
LMLem gwùl‑yr
MLem gweel‑yr
OLem gwēl‑
PLem *gwēl‑
PIE *g̑uÌŻĂ©lh₁‑os, zero-affix noun of
  PIE *g̑uÌŻelh₁‑ ‘burn, blaze’

doublet of gwlĂ .

Cognates

Ved jvĂĄlati ‘burn’, Lit ĆŸvá»čla ‘glitter’

gwrĂ .

to cut something-dat into something-acc [e.g. pieces, in two] with a knife

gwrĂč. knife

Usage notes

The knife is a metaphor for nourishing and supporting fellow humans, for example children (based on the idea of cutting bread or meat).

Etymology

NLem, LMLem, MLem gwer‑a
OLem gwer‑ ‘cut’
PLem *gwer‑, Narten present of
PIE *kʷer‑

Cognates

Ved krÌ„áč‡Ăłti ‘does’, Lit kuriĂč ‘build, create; kindle’

gwrĂ jd.

to make roses

Etymology

contamination of
NLem gword‑a
LMLem, MLem gword‑yr
OLem gword‑
PWald *gvórd‑a
PIE *uÌŻĆ•Ì„d‑om ‘flower’
 —with—
NLem rundr‑a ‘red’
LMLem, MLem rundr‑yr
OLem hrundr‑
PLem *hrundr‑, r-stem adjective of
PIE *h₁reuÌŻdʰ‑

Cognates

Eng rose (via Gk áż„ÏŒÎŽÎżÎœ and an Indo-Iranian language)

gwnĂ .

to be eager, to behave eagerly

Etymology

NLem gwon‑a
LMLem, MLem gwon‑ar
OLem gwon‑
PLem *gwon‑
PIE *k̑uÌŻĂłn‑s ‘dog’

Cognates

Eng hound, Lat canis ‘dog’

dĂ . [1]

to give something-acc to someone-dat;
dat: to get, receive (agentive: take) something-acc from someone-nom

dytexĂ . to sow
dyxĂ f. to water something-dat
etc.

Usage notes

Giving at the ‘right’ time was an important issue in Late Middle Lemizh times, governed by rather complicated rules. Today, we still have phrases such as dà nÌjaR. ‘give between times = commit a social blunder’ and dà gmÌaR. ‘give outside times = ditto’; and dàR. ‘the time of giving’ can mean ‘exactly the right moment’.

Etymology

NLem dO‑a
LMLem dÒ‑a
MLem dOO‑a
OLem dö‑
PLem *dƍ‑, Narten present of
PIE *deh₃‑

Cognates

Gk ÎŽÎŻÎŽÏ‰ÎŒÎč ‘give’, Lat dƍ ‘give’

dĂ . [2]

agentive ins: to calculate a trigonometric function of an angle etc.-dat to give some result-acc (see unit 7, Mathematical functions)

illustration of the use of spatial verbs for the trigonometric functions

dyprà. to calculate the cosine (⇐ ⇔ dà prìly. ~ ‘calculate the frontness’, i.e. the distance in the direction of the first or x-axis)
dyàf. to calculate the sine (~ ‘calculate the upness’)
dyfàw. to calculate the tangent (~ ‘calculate the farness’)

Etymology

academic formation, gender change of
NLem disk‑a ‘circle’

See dĂ sk. for further information.

Cognates

Eng disc (via Lat discus)

darawĂ .

to make Australian

darawĂ r. Australia

Etymology

from the Tharawal tribe in southeastern Australia, following the tradition of naming continents after people that either live there (blUcnàr. ‘Africa’) or thereabouts (astekàr. ‘South America’) or have discovered them (loxlàr. ‘North America’, krytfokàr. ‘Antarctica’)

All continents, like most islands, have ‘female’ (zero) poststems.

dĂ p.

to make flour

Etymology

NLem dap‑a
LMLem, MLem dap‑yr
OLem dap‑
PLem *daf‑ ‘split up’, root present of
PIE *deh₂p‑

doublet of dapĂ .

Cognates

Gk Ύᜱπτω ‘devour’

dapĂ .

to make powder, to pulverise

Etymology

NLem dap‑a ‘flour’
LMLem, MLem dap‑yr
OLem dap‑
PLem *daf‑ ‘split up’, root present of
PIE *deh₂p‑

This word replaced NLem kon‑a << Koi ÎșáœčÎœÎč‑ς ‘powder, dust’.

doublet of dĂ p.

Cognates

Gk Ύᜱπτω ‘devour’

dĂ pq.

to pay an amount/price-acc to someone-dat for something-fin;

dÌpq. price for something-fin; fin: to cost an amount-acc
dĂčpq. money
dÙlpq. purchase (something for which has been paid)

dypqnÙl. free of charge
dypqcrÙl. cheap
dypqdmÙl. expensive

Etymology

NLem dOpf‑a
LMLem dÒaptf‑a
MLem dOO‑aptf‑a, compound of
  MLem dOO‑a ‘give’
OLem dö‑
PLem *dƍ‑, Narten present of
PIE *deh₃‑
 —and—
  MLem aptf‑yr ‘gold’
Ghe aptf‑ə̄ /aptɞɯː/

Cognates

Gk ÎŽÎŻÎŽÏ‰ÎŒÎč, Lat dƍ

dĂ cj.

to plug something (e.g. a leak)-dat; something-acc in(to something-dat)

dÌcj. a plug

Usage notes

This verb has negative undertones (attested since NLem) and can express blocking something or hindering someone; it is also used in rude expressions such as dacjdĂ xt jÌki: ‘Plug [your] mouth = Shut up!’ and nadĂ xt dĂŹlcji: ‘Unplug = Pull the plug out of your â€Š!’ (for someone who is full of themself – compare Piedmontese Ma gavte la nata).

Etymology

NLem darjn‑a
LMLem, MLem darngj‑a ‘hold (fast)’
OLem darnggh‑
PLem *darnggh‑, nasal-infix present of
PIE *dregʰ‑

doublet of skrĂ c.

Cognates

Gk ÎŽÏÎŹÏƒÏƒÎżÎŒÎ±Îč ‘hold, seize’, OCS drŃŠĆŸÇ« ‘hold’

dĂ v.

to make yellow, to yellow

dyvnÌs. chlorine (symbol: Χ)

Etymology

NLem devr‑a
LMLem dùqur‑yr ‘shiny, yellow’
MLem deequr‑yr
OLem dēthur‑
PLem *dēthor‑ ‘light-giver’
PIE *dĂ©iÌŻh₂‑tor‑s, event agent of
  PIE *deiÌŻh₂‑ ‘light up’

Old Lemizh ‘shiny, yellow [one]’ is a metonymy of the earlier meaning ‘light-giver’.

Cognates

Gk ÎŽáœłÎ±Ï„Îż ‘it seemed, appeared’, Ved dÄ«dā́ya ‘shines’

dĂ xt.

dat: must, have to do something-acc;
to command, order, tell someone-dat to do something-acc (see unit 13, Overview of the modals);
ben: to need something-acc from someone-dat

dÌxt. necessary; necessity, duty

Etymology

NLem, LMLem, MLem daxt‑a
OLem daçt‑
PLem *daçs‑ ‘be capable, be suitable’, root present of
PIE *dek̑s‑

The similarity with làxt. ‘want’ is pure coincidence.

Cognates

Ved dĂĄkáčŁate ‘is of use, is able’

dĂ h.

to make ten individuals

‘make ten’, a version of an old language game for ten players, focusing on abstract thought. Other versions of this game are for four, five or seven players, and named accordingly. The cover term for the game is dmĂ j. ‘fill (up), make full > make quite a lot’.

Usage notes

The number ten is associated with feasts and opulent meals, as in the phrase soÌx dÌhy., lit. ‘ten dishes’.

Etymology

NLem dih‑a
LMLem, MLem dih‑yl
OLem dish‑, inflected form of
PLem *deshamt
PIE *dĂ©k̑mÌ„t

Cognates

Eng ten, Gk ΎέÎșα ‘ten’

dĂ sk.

to make circles; to go in circles around something-dat, to circle something-dat

dĂčsk. compass (tool for drawing circles)

Etymology

NLem disk‑a
LMLem dìsk‑yr ‘disk, circle’
Koi Ύ᜷σÎșâ€‘ÎżÏ‚ ‘disk’, of unknown origin

See also dĂ ..

Cognates

Eng disc (via Lat discus)

dirĂ .

to make tiaras (also the constellation Corona Australis; see appendix, Constellations)

Usage notes

Making tiaras became an increasingly specialised and intricate craft during LMLem and NLem times. We can still use dirù. ‘tiara-maker’ to refer to someone who is highly skilled in their job.

Etymology

NLem dira‑a
LMLem dìarà‑yr
MLem diaaraa‑yr
OTroy τÎč៱ρ៱‑ς /dˈiaːraːs/
SHell *tiā́rā‑s, from an Asian language

Cognates

Eng tiara (via Gk τÎčÎŹÏÎ± ‘tiara’)

disfĂ k.

to make a electric potential, voltage or magnetic current unit, a potential/current of 64.34 millivolts (see appendix, Units of measurement)

Etymology

shortened form, academic loan of
Koi ÎŽÎčα‑σφᜱΟ ‘gorge’, lit. ‘hewn through’, compound of
  Koi ÏƒÏ†ÎŹÎ¶Ï‰ ‘slaughter, kill’, of unknown origin
 —and—
  Koi ÎŽÎčα‑ ‘through, across, by, over’
SHell *dwisa‑, prefix derivation of
  SHell *dwis ‘twice’
PIE *duÌŻis, multiplicative of
  PIE *duÌŻĂłh₁ ‘two’

Most electric units use the electricity is water metaphor, which relates voltage to an altitude difference.

dobĂ .

to make carpets, rugs (also the constellation in the northeastern part of Cygnus; see appendix, Constellations)

Etymology

NLem dobe‑a
LMLem dĂČbù‑yr
MLem doubee‑yr
OTroy ταπη‑ς /ˈda͜ubeːs/
SHell *tápē‑s, probably from an Asian language

Cognates

Eng tapestry, Ger Teppich ‘carpet, rug’ (both via Gk Ï„ÎŹÏ€Î·Ï‚ ‘carpet, rug, mat’)

duxvĂ sk.

to make someone-dat addicted to something-acc

Etymology

NLem dux‑vesk‑a, compound of
  NLem, LMLem, MLem dux‑a ‘pull’
OLem duh‑
PLem *duh‑, root present of
PIE *deuÌŻk‑
 —and—
  NLem, LMLem, MLem vesk‑a ‘err’
OLem dhesk‑ ‘misplace > err’
PLem *dzesk‑ ‘put’, sk̑-present of
PIE *dʰeh₁‑ ‘put, make’

Cognates

Eng tow, Lat dĆ«cƍ ‘lead, guide’; Eng do

drĂ .

to make trees

Etymology

NLem dur‑a ‘wood (material)’
LMLem dur‑yr
MLem duru‑yr
OLem duru‑
PLem *doru‑ ‘tree, wood (material)’
PIE *dĂłru

The semantic change from ‘wood’ (the material) to ‘tree’ is motivated by the mythologically female nature of trees. The variant with the ‘male’ poststem, drÌt., is the modern word for the material.

The NLem word for ‘tree’ was wror‑a, which would have become (feminised) ModLem wrà., a homonym of ‘carry’.

also a doublet of drulĂ .

Cognates

Eng tree, Gk Ύόρυ ‘wood, tree, spear’

drĂ t.

to make/produce wood, timber

Usage notes

People who swear a lot have been said to behave like woodworkers since Late Middle Lemizh (rather unfairly, since woodworkers’ oaths are usually pretty mild).

Etymology

gender change of
NLem dur‑a
LMLem dur‑yr
MLem duru‑yr
OLem duru‑
PLem *doru‑ ‘tree, wood (material)’
PIE *dĂłru

doublet of drĂ . and drulĂ .

Cognates

Eng tree, Gk Ύόρυ ‘wood, tree, spear’

drĂ ph.

to make bitter, to give a bitter taste to something-dat

drÚph. magnesium (symbol: Π)

Etymology

contamination of
NLem drOp‑a ‘acrid, pungent’
LMLem, MLem drep‑ir ‘midge biting season’
OLem drep‑ ‘tear, bite off’ [especially said of small animals]
PLem *dref‑ ‘cut, tear (off)’, Narten present of
PIE *drep‑
 —with—
NLem abc‑a ‘(unpleasantly) bitter’
LMLem, MLem abgc‑yr ‘bitter’
Ghe apqshˇ‑ə̄ /abÉąÊ’ÉŻË/

Cognates

Gk ÎŽÏáœłÏ€Ï„Ï‰ ‘pluck, pick’, Slov dȓpljem ‘pluck, tear’

drĂ j.

to make citrus fruits

drĂšj. citrus tree or shrub (especially those with edible fruit)
drÌj. citrus fruit

dryjyphĂ . to make oranges
dryjlĂ bv. to make white grapefriuts
dryjlĂ xw. to make limes
dryjglĂ st. to make (red) grapefruits
dryjdĂ v. to make lemons
(all with inner nom for the tree and inner acc for the fruit)

Usage notes

Citrus trees have been personified since Early New Lemizh times. Prominent is the idea that they purposefully produce their fruit for its colour, smell and taste.

Etymology

NLem drun‑a
LMLem dryn‑a
OCh 橙 /*[d]Ë€rəƋ/ ‘citrus tree’, of unknown origin

drĂ zd.

to make chairs

Etymology

NLem druzd‑a
LMLem, MLem duruzd‑yr ‘stool, chair’
OLem duru‑zd‑ ‘stool, chair’, lit. ‘wooden seat’, compound of
  OLem duru‑ ‘wood’
PLem *doru‑ ‘tree, wood (material)’
PIE *dĂłru
 —and—
  OLem zd‑ ‘sit’
PLem *zd‑, root aorist of
PIE *sed‑ ‘sit down’

Cognates

Eng sit; Gk Ύόρυ ‘wood, tree, spear’

drĂ w.

to dance with someone-dat (In partner dances, the man is usually in the nom and the lady in the dat; in group dances, we use the nom, or possibly the acc if seen as self-transporting, with a partitive ‘and’.);
a dance (action of dancing)

drĂšw., drĂŹw. dance partner (in a partner dance)
drùw., drÌw. (with outer partitive) dance partner (in a group dance)
drĂČrw. dance floor

Etymology

NLem, LMLem, MLem darw‑a
OLem darw‑
PLem *darw‑, u-present of
PIE *dreuÌŻâ€‘ ‘run’

doublet of dnĂ .

For NLem darw‑in ‘dance partners, among others’, see Nature 462, 288: Bird behaviour, Darwin and dance.

Cognates

Ved drávati ‘runs’, Cro Drava and other European river names. Although Eng draw is unrelated, partner dancing is really a draw in at least three senses of the word – finding your partner is a draw; discussions with your partner often end in a draw; and when you’re getting good at it, you’re a draw.

droĂ .

to make Troyan

droĂ r. the country of Troy (modern endonym: ηλψσáœč /lÌ©pˈsu/) in Asia Minor

droUkrÌst. Turkish Delight (⇐ ⇔ droÌ krÌstU. ‘Troyan thing [beneficient] for the throat’)

Etymology

NLem dro‑a
LMLem drĂČ‑yr
MLem drou‑yr
OTroy Î€ÏÎżÎč‑α /ˈdroia/, from an Anatolian word, ultimately
PIE *trᾗb‑s ‘dwelling’

The term for Turkish Delight is calqued from Ar Ű±ÙŽŰ§Ű­ÙŽŰ© Ű§Ù„Ù’Ű­ÙÙ„Ù’Ù‚ÙÙˆÙ… ‘throat comfort’.

Cognates

Ger Dorf ‘village’, Eng place names such as Weaver‑thorpe, OIr treb ‘house, farm’

drulĂ .

to make bushes, shrubs

drulygwrÌjd. rosebush; also a constellation corresponding to part of Cassiopeia (see appendix, Constellations)

Etymology

NLem drul‑a
LMLem, MLem durul‑yr
OLem durul‑
PLem *dorul‑
PIE *dóru‑l‑om ‘small tree’, diminutive of
  PIE *dĂłru ‘tree, wood (material)’

Trees and bushes are mythologically female (as evidenced by the Greek dryads, which are also etymologically related). This inhibited poststem formation of this word; otherwise expected would be **dràj.. Regular feminisation was inhibited by the related word drÌ. ‘tree’.

also a doublet of drĂ t.

Cognates

Eng tree, Gk Ύόρυ ‘wood, tree, spear’

dnĂ .

self-transporting: to walk somewhere-dat etc.;
(mathematics) a vector

dnĂč. leg

dnà trÌtir. to make a bad move (lit. ‘to walk into the ashes’)

Usage notes

This word can connote walking somewhere for a purpose, or walking with an aim, as frĂ w. is the go-to word for ambling aimlessly.

Etymology

NLem dn‑a
LMLem drn‑a ‘run’
MLem drnu‑a
OLem drnu‑
PLem *drnu‑, nasal-infix present of
PIE *dreuÌŻâ€‘

doublet of drĂ w.

Cognates

Ved drávati ‘runs’, Cro Drava and other European river names; Eng dromedary is from a related PIE root

dnĂ k.

to make corners

Etymology

gender change of
NLem gun‑a
LMLem gun‑yr
MLem gunu‑yr
OLem gunu‑
PLem *gonu‑ ‘knee’
PIE *gÌ‘Ăłnu

Cognates

Eng knee, Gk ÎłÏŒÎœÏ… ‘knee’

dnĂ s.

to assure, convince someone-dat about something-acc;
dat, perfect: to be certain, sure about something-acc (see unit 13, Verbs of certainty)

dnysskrĂŹlp. reductionism
etc.

Etymology

NLem dans‑a
LMLem, MLem dans‑yr ‘adept, confident’
OLem dans‑ ‘become adept’
PLem *dans‑, root present of
PIE *dens‑

Cognates

Eng didactic (via Gk ÎŽÎčΎαÎșτÎčÎșός ‘skilled in teaching’)

dniĂ .

to make mortar

Etymology

NLem gni‑a
LMLem konì‑yr ‘plaster (for coating walls)’
Koi ÎșÎżÎœáœ·â€‘áŸ± ‘dust, plaster (for coating walls)’
SHell *koní‑ā
PIE *kón‑os ‘dust, ashes’

Cognates

Eng in‑cinerate (via Lat cinis ‘ashes’)

dnujrĂ .

to make the river Danube

Etymology

gender change of
NLem dnuj‑arg‑a, clarifying compound of
  NLem dnuj‑a
LMLem danĂČj‑yr
MLem danouj‑yr
PCelt *danouy‑ós, derivation, u-present of
PIE *dʰenh₂‑ ‘slip away’
 —and—
  NLem arg‑a ‘river’
LMLem, MLem arg‑ar
OLem arg‑ ‘flow, drip’
PLem *arg‑, root present of
PIE *reg̑‑

Cognates

Eng Danube; Ice raki ‘moisture, dampness’

dmĂ .

to make many, much (relative weight 3⁄4; see unit 7, Weighting numerals – usually with partitive bracket; see unit 8, Cardinal numerals)

also an alternative name for the language game mentioned under dmĂ j.

Etymology

gender change of
NLem bmin‑a ‘full’
LMLem, MLem pylmen‑yr
OLem pylhmen‑
PLem *palhmen‑
PIE *plÌ„h₁‑mh̄₁n‑ós ‘filled’, root present mediopassive participle of
  PIE *pleh₁‑ ‘fill, become full’

See RĂ bv. for information on Ghean weighting numerals.

doublet of dmĂ j.

Cognates

Eng full, Lat plēnus ‘full’

dmĂ d.

to make islands

Etymology

NLem dmyd‑a ‘private, secluded space > island’
LMLem domàti‑yr ‘room, chamber’
Koi ΎωΌᜱτÎčâ€‘ÎżÎœ, diminutive of
  Koi ÎŽáż¶ÎŒÎ± ‘house’, rebuilt as Όα-stem of
SHell *dĂ”
PIE *dómh₂‑s, root noun of
  PIE *demh₂‑ ‘build’

doublet of dmĂ k.

The modern meaning was originally sailors’ jargon until it came into wider use in the last centuries. The older word for an island is NLem jsoj‑a. (See also jsàj. and stràz..)

Cognates

Eng dome (via Lat domus ‘house’)

dmĂ k.

to make bricks

Etymology

NLem damk‑a
LMLem, MLem damk‑yr
OLem damk‑ ‘build; brick’
PLem *damx‑ ‘build’, root present of
PIE *demh₂‑

doublet of dmĂ d.

Cognates

Eng dome (via Lat domus ‘house’)

dmĂ t.

to make/produce an optical stimulus;
to seem to someone-dat (to be) somehow / like someone-qualnom;
dat: to see (agentive: look at) something-nom, the image of something-acc;
agentive caus: to show someone-dat something-nom, the image of something-acc;
dat, perfect: to know something-nom (having seen it)

dmĂčt. eye

dmetfàw. dat: to watch television (⇐ ⇔ dmàt fÌwe. ‘see something far away’)
dmetfĂčw. the medium of television; television set

Etymology

NLem, LMLem, MLem demt‑a
OLem demt‑
PLem *dems‑, Narten present of
PIE *dekʷs‑ ‘show’

The word for television is a calque from British.

Cognates

Av daxĆĄatÌ° ‘teach(?)’

dmĂ px.

to make hats; (geometry) to make cones

Usage notes

The NLem word at first referred to a type of weird hats that were fashionable at the time; today, it denotes hats of all sorts.

Also since NLem times, dmÌpx. has been used metonymically to refer to people with respect to their brainpower, like we use ‘brain’ in ‘She is the brain of our organisation’ or ‘We need some good brains’. However, the implication of intelligence is slightly less pronounced.

Etymology

NLem bempx‑a
LMLem bùmbik‑yr ‘cone’
Koi ÎČáœłÎŒÎČÎčΟ ‘bumblebee, spinning top’, of unknown origin

dmĂ j.

to make quite a lot (relative weight 5⁄8; see unit 7, Weighting numerals – usually with partitive bracket; see unit 8, Cardinal numerals)

also an old language game for four, five, seven or ten players, focusing on abstract thought. Although the game is 4000 years old, this cover term only came into use by Early New Lemizh times when it still meant ‘make full’.

Etymology

NLem bmin‑a ‘full’
LMLem, MLem pylmen‑yr
OLem pylhmen‑
PLem *palhmen‑
PIE *plÌ„h₁‑mh̄₁n‑ós ‘filled’, root present mediopassive participle of
  PIE *pleh₁‑ ‘fill, become full’

See RĂ bv. for information on Ghean weighting numerals.

doublet of dmĂ .

Cognates

Eng full, Lat plēnus ‘full’

djĂ .

to sell something-acc to someone-dat;
dat: to buy something-acc from someone-nom

djÌ. purchase (something bought)
djĂČr. shop

Etymology

irregular poststem of
NLem taln‑a
LMLem, MLem talnk‑a ‘burden’ [tr.]
OLem talnk‑
PLem *talnx‑ ‘lift up, take upon oneself’, nasal-infix present of
PIE *telh₂‑

Cognates

Eng thole, tolerate (via Lat tolerƍ ‘endure’), Lat tollƍ ‘lift up, take away’

djĂ t.

to make (it) daytime

djĂšRt. morning
djĂŹRt. evening

djĂ t jnyĂœR xĂ xs xtrÌjy. Day is eternal, [only] the planet turns. (compare OArk Reeh Votanthar dovulum Moo.)

For compounds denoting weekdays, see the appendix, Date.

Usage notes

Daytime, like the Sun, is mythologically and poetically seen as male. This is the source of the ‘male’ (non-zero) poststem. See also the word for the night.

Etymology

gender change of
NLem dje‑a
LMLem djù‑yr
MLem djei‑yr ‘day’
OLem djei‑
PLem *djēw‑
PIE *diÌŻáž—u‑s ‘sky’

Cognates

Gk ΖΔύς ‘Zeus’, Lat diēs ‘day’

djĂ vf.

to make a week, a time span of seven days (see appendix, Units of measurement, for usage)

Etymology

NLem djevf‑a
LMLem djùqif‑yr
MLem djei‑qif‑yr, compound of
  MLem djei‑yr ‘day’
OLem djei‑
PLem *djēw‑
PIE *diÌŻáž—u‑s ‘sky’
 —and—
  MLem qif‑yl ‘seven’
OLem thift‑, inflected form of
PLem *seftam
PIE *septm̄́

Cognates

Lat diēs ‘day’; Eng seven

djeipysrĂ d.

to make the god or the planet Jupiter/Zeus (symbol: Å)

Usage notes

See xĂ ps. for the associated weekday.

This is the head of the polytheistic religion’s pantheon in the Lemizh denomination. Other denominations such as Greek and Ethiynic mainly differ in gods’ names, holidays, and other details. Polytheism in Europe goes back to PIE times, making its gods cognate to our Graeco-Roman pantheon. It is one of three major religions on this continent, the others being an atheism of Ghean heritage and a monotheism which is distantly related to Judaism.

Some Lemizh gods and goddesses (djiÌ.) and their Roman and Greek equivalents

LemizhRomanGreek
ihkĂš.LunaSelene
usrÌ.VenusAphrodite
OnkrÌt.MercuryHermes
niftnÌj.NeptunePoseidon
minÌ.MinervaAthena
djeipysrÌd.JupiterZeus
djingmesrÌ.TerraGaia
djistnÌt.SaturnKronos
bvyrgcÌ.ProserpinaPersephone
xyrtksÌ.DianaArtemis
sxnĂšz.SolHelios
fOpysrÌf.(none; Midwinter God)
frekrÌf.MarsAres

Etymology

gender change of
NLem djeipysir‑a, academic loan of
OLem djeipysir‑ ‘Father Sky’
PLem *djēw‑paser‑, compound of
  PLem *djēw‑ ‘sky’
PIE *diÌŻáž—u‑s
 —and—
  PLem *paser‑ ‘father’
PIE *phÌ„â‚‚tĂ©r‑s

Cognates

Gk ΖΔύς Î Î±Ï„ÎźÏ ‘Father Zeus’, Lat Jupiter

djemĂ .

to have an idea

djemÌ. an idea

Etymology

NLem djem‑a
LMLem djùmyn‑yr
MLem djeemyn‑yr
OLem djēmyn‑
PLem *djāman‑ ‘sign’
PIE *dÊ°iÌŻĂ©h₂‑mnÌ„, neuter abstract -mnÌ„-noun of
  PIE *dÊ°iÌŻeh₂‑ ‘notice’

doublet of zmĂ s. and smĂ .

Cognates

Eng semantic (via Gk), Ved dhyāyati ‘think of, imagine’

djiĂ .

to make gods/goddesses

Usage notes

This word only applies to polytheistic gods, while igcĂšd. is reserved for the monotheistic god. See djeipysrĂ d. for some information on Lemizh polytheism.

Etymology

NLem dzi‑a, academic loan of
OLem dzi‑, back-formation of Mother Earth’s (dzingmēsir‑) and the Seedputter’s (dziskont‑) names

djingmesrĂ .

to make the goddess Terra/Gaia, also the Earth when explicitly referred to as a planet among the others (symbol: Ã)

Usage notes

See djeipysrĂ d. for some information on Lemizh polytheism, and xnĂ . for the weekday associated with this goddess.

Etymology

NLem dzingmesir‑a, academic loan of
OLem dzingmēsir‑ ‘Mother Earth’
PLem *dzeng‑māser‑, compound of
  PLem *dzeng‑ ‘?’, Narten present of
PIE *dÊ°Ă©g̑ʰ‑
 —and—
  PLem *māser‑ ‘mother’
PIE *mĂ©h₂ter‑s

The first part of the PLem compound *dzeng‑māser‑ is the (verbal) root of PLem *dzeng‑om‑ ‘earth’ and is of unclear meaning.

Cognates

Eng humus (via Lat humus ‘ground, earth, soil’); Eng mother

djistnĂ t.

to make the god or the planet Saturn/Kronos (symbol: Æ)

Usage notes

See djeipysrĂ d. for some information on Lemizh polytheism, and nĂ t. for the weekday associated with this god.

Etymology

NLem dziskont‑a, academic loan of
OLem dziskont‑ ‘Seedputter (the God of agriculture)’
PLem *dzeskont‑
PIE *dÊ°h̄₁skÌ‘â€‘Ăłnt‑s ‘putting, making’, skÌ‘Ă©-present active participle of
  PIE *dÊ°eh₁‑ ‘put, make’

The root is probably the same as in PIE *dÊ°Ăłh₁‑n‑eh₂ ‘seed, grain’.

Cognates

Gk ÎŽÎŻÎŽÏ‰ÎŒÎč ‘give’, Lat dƍ ‘give’

djnĂ .

to make soil

Etymology

gender change of
NLem dznum‑a
LMLem, MLem dzingom‑yr
OLem dzingom‑
PLem *dzengom‑ ‘earth’
PIE *dÊ°Ă©g̑ʰ‑om‑s, m-stem noun of
  PIE *dÊ°Ă©g̑ʰ‑ ‘?’

Cognates

Eng humus (via Lat humus ‘ground, earth, soil’)

djnirĂ .

to live as a nomad

Etymology

NLem dznir‑a
LMLem, MLem dwaxner‑ar
OLem dwa‑xner‑, compound of
  OLem dw‑ ‘move about’
PLem *dw‑, root present of
PIE *tekʷ‑ ‘run, flow’
 —and—
  OLem xner‑ ‘man’
PLem *xner‑
PIE *h₂nĂ©r‑s

Cognates

Lit tekĂč ‘run, flow’; Gk ጀΜ᜔ρ ‘man’

djmĂ .

dat: to taste something-nom; nom: to taste of something-acc

djmĂč. tongue

Etymology

NLem djmi‑a ‘tongue’
LMLem dyngwù‑yr
MLem dyngwee‑yr
OLem dyngwē‑
PLem *dangwā‑
PIE *dnÌ„g̑ʰuÌŻĂ©h₂‑s

Cognates

Eng tongue, Lat lingua ‘tongue, speech’

dwĂ .

to make two individuals

Usage notes

The number two conjures up teatime. The traditional Lemizh teatime ritual is more akin to the English than to the Chinese one – homely, without much fuss, and ideally for two people.

Etymology

NLem dwO‑a
LMLem dwÒ‑yl
MLem dwOO‑yl
OLem dwö‑, inflected form of
PLem *dwƍ
PIE *duÌŻĂłh₁

Cognates

Eng two, Gk ÎŽÏÎż ‘two’

dwĂ tx.

to doubt something-acc

Etymology

NLem dwatx‑a
LMLem *dw‑tx‑a, clarifying compound of
  LMLem, MLem dw‑a ‘move about’
OLem dw‑
PLem *dw‑, root present of
PIE *tekʷ‑ ‘run, flow’
 —and—
  LMLem tx‑ar ‘doubtful’
MLem txu‑ar ‘doubtful, indecisive’
OLem txu‑
PLem *txu‑, u-stem adjective of
PIE *deh₂‑ ‘split’

The LMLem form, apparently meaning ‘[mentally] moving about in doubt’, is not attested and may already have had an epenthetic vowel to break up the consonant cluster. An alleged relation to dwÌ. ‘two’, while found in other languages (Ger Zwei‑fel ‘doubt’; Eng doubt << Lat dubitƍ, probably < du‑hibius lit. ‘held as two’), is a folk etymology.

Cognates

Lit tekĂč ‘run, flow’; Gk ÎŽÎ±ÎŻÎżÎŒÎ±Îč ‘divide’

dwĂ c.

to marry (Traditionally, the man is in the nom and the woman in the dat; the more modern approach is to use the nom for both, combined with a partitive ‘and’.); a wedding

dwĂšc. (traditional) bridegroom, husband; (modern, with outer partitive) spouse
dwĂŹc. (traditional) bride, wife
dwĂŹlc. marriage
dwĂČc. a Lemizh concept similar to getting engaged, but more informal

dwecRìc. king’s wife; also the constellation Cassiopeia (see appendix, Constellations)
dwocwĂš., dwocwĂŹ. fiancĂ©(e) (The second w is a pronoun referring to the parole and has to be adjusted for the word’s level. See ‘spilt milk’ in unit 10, Perfect, which is the same type of construction only with a cons instead of a ten.)

Usage notes

While a modern Lemizh marriage amounts to a sincere promise, little is known about the situation in Old Lemizh times. OLem dwarnh‑ seems to have referred to a rather more informal concept; it may have meant something closer to ‘get engaged’.

The resemblence to dwà. ‘make two’ is pure chance but often seen as quite fitting.

Etymology

NLem, LMLem, MLem dwarn‑a
OLem dwarnh‑
PLem *dwarnh‑, nasal-infix present of
PIE *tuÌŻerh₁‑ ‘grasp’

Cognates

Lit tveriĂč ‘grasp’, Gk σΔÎčρ៱́ ‘rope, chain’

dwĂ cj.

to be enthusiastic about something-acc/causal-transporting, also dat/causal-receiving (see unit 3, Ambiguous usage)

Etymology

NLem dwarjm‑a
LMLem, MLem dwarnw‑yr
OLem dwarnw‑ ‘excite joyfully, fill with enthusiasm’
PLem *dwarnw‑, nĂ©uÌŻ-present of
PIE *tuÌŻer‑ ‘drive’

Cognates

Ved tvárate ‘hurry’

dwĂ w.

to make bottles

Etymology

NLem dwOwr‑a
LMLem dwÒ‑wer‑yr ‘amphora, bottle’, nominalisation, compound of
  LMLem dwÒ‑yl ‘two’
MLem dwOO‑yl
OLem dwö‑, inflected form of
PLem *dwƍ
PIE *duÌŻĂłh₁
 —and—
  LMLem, MLem wer‑a ‘carry, bear’
OLem wer‑
PLem *bwer‑, Narten present of
PIE *bʰer‑

This is a LMLem calque from Koi áŒ€ÎŒÏ†ÎżÏÎ”ÏÏ‚ ‘amphora’.

Cognates

Eng two; Eng bear ‘carry’

dwnĂ t.

to hit something-dat; to smash, shatter something-dat into something-acc [e.g. shards] by hitting it;
dat: to be hit; to shatter into something-acc

Usage notes

The ‘destroying’ meanings are distinguished from the ‘hitting’ one by the acc object or – often simpler – by instead using nominal verbs such as skràp. ‘split, turn into parts’, skàqk. ‘turn into shards’, etc.

Etymology

NLem, LMLem, MLem dwant‑a ‘shatter’
OLem dwant‑
PLem *dwans‑ ‘crumble’, nasal-infix present of
PIE *dÊ°uÌŻens‑ ‘crumble, dissipate’

Cognates

Ved dhvĂĄáčsate ‘crumbles, dissipates’, arguably Eng dust

dwjĂ w.

to make twins (also the constellation Gemini; see appendix, Constellations)

Etymology

NLem dwjem‑a
LMLem dwijùm‑yr
MLem dwijeem‑yr
OLem dwijēm‑
PLem *dwi‑jēm‑, clarifying compound of
  PLem *dwi‑ ‘two-’
PIE *duÌŻi‑, prefix form of
  PIE *duÌŻĂłh₁ ‘two’
 —and—
  PLem *jēm‑ ‘twin’
PIE *iÌŻĂ©mh₂‑os

Cognates

Eng two; Lat geminī ‘twins’

bĂ .

to make female(s), to make women (symbol: Ã)

Etymology

NLem b‑a
LMLem, MLem b‑yr
Ghe pˇ‑ə̄ /bɯː/

Cognates

Claims that the Ghe word is loaned from PCelt *bĂ©n‑ā < PIE *gÊ·Ă©n‑eh₂ ‘woman’ are purely hypothetical.

banĂ .

to make buses

Etymology

NTroy παΜ /ban/ ‘every’
OTroy π៱Μ /baːn/
SHell *pā́n‑s ‘all, every’
PIE *pĂ©h₂nt‑s

Buses were first introduced in the mountainous regions of Troy, where railways weren’t feasible, as a means of transport ÏČÎčλΟσ Ï€Î±Îœ /hilks ban/ ‘for everyone’. They were primarily known for the loud noises they made while going over rough mountain roads.

Cognates

Gk π៶ς ‘all, every’, TochB po ‘all, every’

bĂ bj.

to make parrots

Etymology

NLem babj‑a
LMLem, MLem babj‑yr
OTroy Ï€Î±Ï€Îłâ€‘Î± /ˈbabÉ°a/, onomatopoetic, probably from a South Asian language

Cognates

Ger Papagei ‘parrot’ (via Ar ŰšÙŽŰšÙŽÙ‘ŰșÙŽŰ§ŰĄ ‘parrot’)

bĂ j.

to make gardens, to garden

Etymology

NLem baj‑a
LMLem bàj‑yr
OPers bāğ ‘garden, orchard’

bĂ x.

to get back to the point; to say something-acc to someone-dat, returning to a previous, more important subject (see pragmatics page III, Utterance modifiers: Verbs of communication)

Etymology

NLem, LMLem, MLem bax‑a, from the name of a philosopher who kept reminding his colleagues to stick to the topic at hand

bĂ h.

to make coins

Etymology

Eth bhĂșĆĄĆĄ ‘buck(’s horn), type of coin showing buck’s horns’
PWald *bhĂșơ‑ơ ‘buck(’s horn)’
PIE *bÊ°Ășg̑‑s ‘buck, he-goat’

Cognates

Eng buck, Ir boc ‘buck’

bĂ st.

to do heroic deeds, to be a hero

bĂšst. hero

bastjàx. hero’s journey, hero’s quest

Etymology

NLem bast‑a
LMLem bast‑ar, nominalisation of
Koi ÎČαστ‑᜜ ‘lift, raise, bear’, short form of
  Koi ÎČαστᜱζ‑ω, of Pre-Greek origin

Cognates

Ital bastare ‘be enough, suffice’

bermĂ .

to lend someone-dat something-acc;
dat: to borrow something-acc from someone-nom, to incur debts to someone-nom;
dat, perfect: to owe someone-nom something-acc

bermÌ. debt (money or goods owed)
bermĂŹl. debt (state of owing someone money or goods)

bermudĂ . borrowing [money], having the opportunity to do so – typically getting oneself foreseeably into trouble (⇐ dĂ  bermĂčy. ‘give / be given the means of borrowing’)

Usage notes

The use of this word is restricted to economical and financial transactions, including minor and private ones such as ‘Can I borrow your pen?’. It isn’t used for social or ethical debts as in ‘I owe you an answer = I must (dàxt.) give you an answer, I must answer you’ or ‘Your advice really helped me; I am in your debt = I must do something for you’.

Etymology

Eth bhĂ©rmi ‘debt’
PWald *bhérmi
PIE *bÊ°Ă©r‑mnÌ„ ‘burden’, neuter abstract -mnÌ„-noun of
  PIE *bÊ°er‑ ‘carry, bear’

doublet of wĂ wb.

Cognates

Eng bear ‘carry’, Gk φέρω ‘carry, bear, bring’

bilĂ .

to approve of something-acc/dat

Etymology

NLem bil‑a
LMLem, MLem bybil‑a ‘bless’
OLem bybil‑ ‘blessed’
PLem *babil‑ ‘?’
Akk 𒆍𒀭𒊏𒆠 ‘Babylon’

bunĂ .

to make coffee

bunÌ. coffee (beverage)
bunĂŹ. coffee beans, ground coffee

Usage notes

An old urban legend held that coffee was made from dead, pulverised rabbits, or alternatively that coffee beans were roasted rabbit droppings. No one believes that, nowadays.

Etymology

NLem buna‑a
Amh buna (or from another Afro-Asiatic language)

bucmĂ .

to make the Boojum (a legendary creature; also the constellation in the region of Centaurus, Antlia and Vela; see appendix, Constellations)

Etymology

NLem bucam‑a, of unknown origin

blĂ .

to make strong, to strengthen

Usage notes

The Lemizh have never taken strength quite seriously. This can be exemplified with a Late Middle Lemizh author who wrote ‘Any reason for strength is just idle talk’. Incidentally, he was killed by a disoriented wrestler.

Etymology

NLem bl‑a
LMLem bl‑yr
MLem blu‑yr
OLem blu‑
PLem *blu‑, u-stem adjective of
PIE *bel‑

Cognates

Gk ÎČÎ”Î»Ï„ÎŻÏ‰Îœ ‘better’, Lat de‑bÄ«lis ‘weak’

blĂ dj.

to announce something-acc to someone-dat

Etymology

NLem, LMLem, MLem blUrdz‑a ‘shout, curse’
OLem blĂŒrdz‑
PLem *blu‑wardz‑ ‘strong word, swear word’, compound of
  PLem *blu‑ ‘strong’, u-stem adjective of
PIE *bel‑
 —and—
  PLem *wardz‑ ‘word’
PIE *uÌŻrÌ„dÊ°â€‘Ăłs

Cognates

Gk ÎČÎ”Î»Ï„ÎŻÏ‰Îœ ‘better’; Eng word

blĂ p.

to make a momentum unit, a momentum of 53.13 millinewton-seconds (see appendix, Units of measurement)

Etymology

gender change of
NLem bel‑a, academic loan of
Koi ÎČáœłÎ»â€‘ÎżÏ‚ ‘missile, arrow’, levelling of
SHell *qÌŒĂ©l‑os
PIE *gÊ·Ă©lh₁‑os, zero-affix noun of
  PIE *gÊ·elh₁‑ ‘hit, throw’

Gender change occurred to avoid homophony with blà. ‘strong’, and also because physicists wanted to be taken seriously.

Cognates

Eng ballistic (via Gk ÎČÎŹÎ»Î»Ï‰ ‘throw’) and probably ball (dancing party) (via Gk ÎČÎ±Î»Î»ÎŻÎ¶Ï‰ ‘dance’)

blĂ c.

to make copper (symbol: Χα)

Etymology

NLem blor‑a
LMLem, MLem pilor‑yr
OLem pilor‑
PLem *pelor‑ ‘a shiny metal, a copper alloy?’
PIE *pĂ©l‑or‑s, r-stem noun of
  PIE *pel‑ ‘flare up’

Cognates

OCS poljǫ ‘burn’

blĂ qk.

to do duty in / as a parliament

blĂšqk. parliamentarian, member of parliament
blĂČrqk. parliament building

Etymology

NLem bleqk‑a
LMLem bul‑reqk‑a ‘senate’, clarifying compound of
  LMLem bul‑yr
Koi ÎČÎżÏ…Î»â€‘áœ” ‘will, decision, (Athenian) senate’, nominalisation of
  Koi ÎČÎżáœ»Î»Îżâ€‘ÎŒÎ±Îč ‘wish, will’
SHell *qÌŒĂłlno‑mai, nasal-infix present of
PIE *gʷelh₃‑ ‘wish, want’
 —and—
  LMLem, MLem reqk‑a ‘meet’
OLem rethk‑
PLem *rethk‑, sk̑-present of
PIE *reh₁t‑ ‘meet, find’

Cognates

Gk ÎČÎżáœ»Î»ÎżÎŒÎ±Îč ‘wish, will’; OCS ob‑ręơtÇ« ‘find’

blUcnĂ .

to make African

blUcnĂ r. Africa

Etymology

NLem blU‑can‑a, clarifying compound of
  NLem blU‑a ‘(North) Africa’
LMLem libÙ‑yr
Koi λÎčÎČ᜻‑η, derivation of
  Koi λ᜷ÎČυ‑ς ‘Libu (tribe in North Africa)’, of unknown origin
 —and—
  NLem can‑a ‘complete, all’
LMLem, MLem can‑yr
OLem shand‑ ‘win’
PLem *sand‑ ‘succeed’, root aorist of
PIE *seh₂dʰ‑

NLem blU‑a was homonymic with the old word for book – see wàtx. –, hence the clarifying compound.

See darawà. for some information on continents’ names.

Cognates

Eng Libya; Gk áŒ°ÎžáżĄÌÏ‚ ‘straight, fair’

bRĂ j.

to make iron (symbol: ÎŁ)

Etymology

NLem bRUl‑a
LMLem, MLem pyrzil‑yr
OLem pyrzil‑
PLem *parzil‑
Akk 𒀭𒁇

Cognates

possibly Lat ferrum ‘iron’

brĂ k.

to make dwarfs

Etymology

NLem bark‑a
LMLem, MLem bark‑yr
OLem bark‑
PLem *bark‑, of unknown origin

brĂ p.

to make black pepper (Piper nigrum) fruits

brĂšp. black pepper plant

Etymology

gender change of
NLem ber‑a
LMLem bebùr‑yr
MLem bebeiri‑yr
OTroy πΔπΔρÎč /beˈbe͜ari/, from an Asian language

bvĂ .

to make a medium number/amount (relative weight 1⁄2; see unit 7, Weighting numerals – usually with partitive bracket; see unit 8, Cardinal numerals)

Etymology

NLem bw‑a ‘much’
LMLem, MLem bw‑yr
Ghe pËĄâ€‘É™Ì„ /bÊ·ÉŻË/

See RĂ bv. for more on Ghean weighting numerals.

bvyrgcĂ .

to make the goddess Proserpina/Persephone; to make the minor planet Vesta

Usage notes

See djeipysrĂ d. for some information on Lemizh polytheism.

Etymology

gender change of
NLem bwyrgjent‑a, academic loan of
OLem bwyrgjent‑ ‘the High One (Goddess of spring)’
PLem *bwargjent‑
PIE *bÊ°rÌ„gÌ‘Ê°Ă©nt‑ih₂ ‘the High One (Goddess of art)’, feminine of
  PIE *bÊ°Ă©rg̑ʰ‑ont‑s ‘high’, nt-stem adjective of
  PIE *bÊ°erg̑ʰ‑ ‘rise’

doublet of gonĂ tx.

Cognates

Eng Brigid (via Ir Brighid)

bvrĂ c.

to dress someone-dat in something-acc;
self-receiving: to dress in something-acc;
dat, perfect: to wear some clothes-acc

Etymology

NLem bwrOr‑a
LMLem, MLem perwer‑a ‘wear’
OLem per‑wer‑, compound of
  OLem peri ‘around, through’
PLem, PIE *peri
 —and—
  OLem wer‑ ‘carry, bear’
PLem *bwer‑, Narten present of
PIE *bʰer‑

Cognates

Gk Ï€Î”ÏÎŻ ‘about, around’; Eng bear ‘carry’

bvmĂ p.

to take fright because of someone or something-acc/causal-transporting (also dat/causal-receiving; see unit 3, Ambiguous usage)
agentive caus, causal-reflexive: to shock, frighten someone-nom

Usage notes

This verb denotes ‘hot’ fear as opposed to ‘cold’ fear, which is xràtx..

Etymology

gender change of
NLem bwmi‑a
LMLem bwimbì‑yr ‘fear’ [noun]
MLem bwimbii‑yr
OLem bwimbī‑
PLem *bwembī‑ ‘fear’ [verb], perfect of
PIE *bÊ°eiÌŻh₂‑ ‘come to fear’

Cognates

Ger beben ‘shake, quiver’, Ved bháyate ‘is afraid’

kĂ .

opposition (‘minus’) negator (see unit 6, Negators): to turn something-dat into the opposite;
to make minus one individual

Etymology

NLem, LMLem, MLem k‑a
Ghe q‑a /qa/

Development of the minus sign

k → The Lemizh letter k rotated sideways so that the double stroke is horizontal. → _

kamlĂ .

to make camels

Etymology

NLem kaml‑a
LMLem kàmel‑yr
Koi Îșáœ±ÎŒÎ·Î»â€‘ÎżÏ‚
SHell *kámēl‑os, from an old Semitic word

doublet of kamlĂ j. and kamlĂ c.

Cognates

Eng camel, Ar ŰŹÙŽÙ…ÙŽÙ„ ‘camel’

kamlĂ j.

to make two-humped or Bactrian camels

Etymology

poststem from plural of
NLem kaml‑a
LMLem kàmel‑yr
Koi Îșáœ±ÎŒÎ·Î»â€‘ÎżÏ‚
SHell *kámēl‑os, from an old Semitic word

doublet of kamlĂ . and kamlĂ c.

Cognates

Eng camel, Ar ŰŹÙŽÙ…ÙŽÙ„ ‘camel’

kamlĂ c.

to make one-humped camels or dromedaries

Etymology

poststem from singular of
NLem kaml‑a
LMLem kàmel‑yr
Koi Îșáœ±ÎŒÎ·Î»â€‘ÎżÏ‚
SHell *kámēl‑os, from an old Semitic word

doublet of kamlĂ . and kamlĂ j.

Cognates

Eng camel, Ar ŰŹÙŽÙ…ÙŽÙ„ ‘camel’

kĂ b.

to make paper

Etymology

NLem kUbr‑a
LMLem kÙper‑yr ‘papyrus’
Koi Îș᜻πΔÎčÏâ€‘ÎżÎœ ‘galingale (Cyperus longus)’, of unknown origin

The Lemizh loaned the wrong word from Koine Greek, as papyrus was made from Cyperus papyrus, not Cyperus longus.

kĂ k.

self-transporting: to go somewhere-dat etc. on wheels

kĂčk. wheel

Etymology

NLem kUkl‑a
LMLem kÙkl‑yr ‘wheel, circle’
Koi Îș᜻ÎșÎ»â€‘ÎżÏ‚
SHell *qĂșql‑os
PIE *kÊ·Ă©kÊ·l‑os

This word replaced native MLem gweml‑yr.

Cognates

Eng wheel, cycle (via Lat cyclus)

kĂ t.

to make cats

Usage notes

Cats, being regarded as somewhat mysterious creatures as in many cultures, have a whole host of associations, a common theme being causality and its absence. A good synopsis is:

Etymology

NLem kat‑a
LMLem kàt‑yr
MLem kaut‑yr
Egy áčŻaute ‘jungle cat’, female form of
  Egy áčŻaus

Cognates

Eng cat, Ital gatto ‘cat’

kĂ jg.

to reluctantly say something-acc – not sufficiently relevant to the current subject – to someone-dat (relevance hedging: see pragmatics page III, Utterance modifiers: Verbs of communication)

Etymology

NLem, LMLem, MLem kejgj‑a
OLem keghggh‑ ‘hold under protection’
PLem *keghggh‑, perfect of
PIE *kagʰ‑ ‘seize, enclose’

Cognates

Eng hedge, Wel cae ‘field’

kĂ cx.

to make horns

kĂšcx. horned (animal)
korncxnĂšs. rhinoceros

Etymology

NLem karxn‑a
LMLem, MLem karxn‑yr
OLem karxn‑
PLem *karxn‑
PIE *k̑rÌ„h₂n‑ós

Cognates

Eng horn, Lat cornĆ« ‘horn’

kĂ x.

to make a speed (actually a rapidity) unit, a speed of 6.980 centimetres per second (see appendix, Units of measurement)

Etymology

NLem koxl‑a ‘unit of velocity’, academic loan of
Koi ÎșáœčÏ‡Î»â€‘ÎżÏ‚ ‘snail (shell)’, probably related to
  Koi ÎșáœčÎłÏ‡â€‘Î· ‘mussel’
SHell *kónkh‑ā
PIE *kĂłngʰ‑eh₂ ‘shell, mussel’

The name of the basic speed unit was chosen for its slowness. It was redefined from a unit of speed to one of rapidity upon the discovery of Lorentz symmetry.

Cognates

Eng, Lat cochlea

kĂ xk.

to regret something-acc

Etymology

NLem kexk‑a
LMLem kùxk‑a
MLem keexk‑a
OLem kēhk‑
PLem *kāhx‑ ‘crave’, intensive of
PIE *keh₂‑ ‘desire, covet’

Cognates

Lat cārus ‘beloved, expensive’, Ved (ā́) cakĂ© ‘desire, be fond of’

kĂ xw.

to make tubers

Etymology

NLem kuxw‑a
LMLem, MLem kuxw‑yr
OLem kuhw‑ ‘tuber, truffle?’
PLem *kuhw‑ ‘swollen > tuber, truffle?’, u-stem adjective of
PIE *kuÌŻeh₁‑ ‘swell’

Cognates

Gk Îșυέω ‘be pregnant’

kĂ st.

to weep

kÌst. tear

Etymology

NLem kust‑a
LMLem, MLem kuzt‑a
OLem kuzt‑
PLem *kuzt‑, root present of
PIE *keuÌŻsdÊ°h₁‑ ‘hide’

The meaning probably developed from the idea of hiding one’s face when weeping.

Cognates

Eng hoard

kĂ f.

to act, speak, think intelligently, to make/produce intelligent deeds, sayings, thoughts

Etymology

NLem kafr‑a
LMLem kafr‑yr
MLem kafr‑yr ‘goat > intelligent’
OLem kafr‑ ‘goat’
PLem *kafr‑
PIE *kápr‑os

For the semantic development in MLem see ysrÌ. ‘goat’.

doublet of kubrĂ .

Cognates

Gk ÎșÎŹÏ€ÏÎżÏ‚ ‘boar’, Ir gabhar ‘goat’

kĂ fk.

agentive dat: to seize something-acc from someone-nom

Usage notes

This word has a negative connotation on the lines of ‘(forcefully) taking something away from someone’, as opposed to the neutral tàk..

With a person in the accusative, this verb can metaphorically mean ‘be seized from one’s ordinary life, have one’s life turned upside down’.

Etymology

NLem, LMLem, MLem kafk‑a
OLem kafk‑
PLem *kafk‑, sk̑-present of
PIE *keh₂p‑ ‘seize, grasp’

Cognates

Eng have, Lat capiƍ ‘take, seize’

keltĂ j.

self-transporting: to swing (only of pendulums)

keltÌj. pendulum

Etymology

poststem from plural of
NLem kelt‑a ‘pendulum, tail’
LMLem kù‑alt‑ar ‘pendulum’, nominalisation, compound of
  LMLem kù‑a ‘swing’
MLem kei‑a ‘wobble, swing’
OLem kei‑
PLem *kēw‑, Narten present of
PIE *keh₁uÌŻâ€‘
 —and—
  LMLem, MLem alt‑yr ‘heavy’
OLem alt‑
PLem *als‑ ‘gather, pick up’, root present of
PIE *les‑

The plural poststem reflects a pendulum’s repetitive swinging.

doublet of klĂ t.

Cognates

Lat cēveƍ ‘move one’s haunches’; Ger lesen ‘gather, read’

kolĂ b.

to make hummingbirds (also part of the constellation Pavo; see appendix, Constellations)

Etymology

NLem kolibr‑a, from a Caribbean language

Cognates

Ger Kolibri ‘hummingbird’

kubrĂ .

to make ibex (also the constellation Capricornus; see appendix, Constellations)

Etymology

NLem kobr‑a
Besk kÄbr
PCelt *gábr‑os ‘goat’
PIE *kápr‑os

This is one of the few Beskidic loans for which the TlöngĂ¶Ì€l is not to be blamed. The Lemizh learned about the Alpine ibex from the Beskidic people and adopted their name for it.

doublet of kĂ f.

Cognates

Gk ÎșÎŹÏ€ÏÎżÏ‚ ‘boar’, Ir gabhar ‘goat’

kukĂ .

to make cuckoos

Etymology

NLem kuk‑a
LMLem kuk‑yr
MLem kuku‑yr
OLem kuku‑, onomatopoetic

This word replaced older gjingung‑, whence ModLem gcnàjg. ‘deceive’.

klĂ .

dat: to steal something-acc

klĂš. thief

Etymology

gender change of
NLem, LMLem, MLem kalp‑a
OLem kalp‑
PLem *kalp‑, root present of
PIE *klep‑

Gender change avoided homophony with klàp. ‘thank’, which would be rather incongruous.

Cognates

Eng klepto‑maniac (via Gk Îșλέπτω ‘steal’)

klĂ t.

to make tails

Etymology

NLem kelt‑a ‘pendulum, tail’
LMLem kù‑alt‑ar ‘pendulum’, nominalisation, compound of
  LMLem kù‑a ‘swing’
MLem kei‑a ‘wobble, swing’
OLem kei‑
PLem *kēw‑, Narten present of
PIE *keh₁uÌŻâ€‘
 —and—
  LMLem, MLem alt‑yr ‘heavy’
OLem alt‑
PLem *als‑ ‘gather, pick up’, root present of
PIE *les‑

This word replaced LMLem kesman‑yr ‘tail’ (a doublet of xtàj.).

doublet of keltĂ j.

Cognates

Lat cēveƍ ‘move one’s haunches’; Ger lesen ‘gather, read’

klĂ p.

to thank someone-dat for something-acc

Etymology

NLem talp‑a ‘spacious’
LMLem, MLem talp‑yr
OLem talp‑
PLem *talp‑, o-stem adjective of
PIE *telp‑ ‘make room’

The modern meaning stems from the rather informal NLem phrase spnyra talpya:, roughly ‘thanks a bunch’, lit. ‘[I] thank [you] spaciously’.

Cognates

Lit telpĂč ‘find space’

klĂ j.

to cope (agentive: deal) with, handle something-dat

Etymology

NLem tlOn‑a ‘endure, pluck up courage’
LMLem tlùn‑a
Koi Ï„Î»áż†ÎœÎ±Îč, nasal-infix present of
PIE *telh₂‑ ‘lift up, take upon oneself’

This word, in its Early New Lemizh form, is the title of the TlöngĂ¶Ì€l, which many Lemizh refuse to recognise as their national epic.

Cognates

Eng thole, tolerate (via Lat tolerƍ ‘endure’), Lat tollƍ ‘lift up, take away’

klĂ f.

to make pictures (paintings, drawings, prints, photographs etc.)

Usage notes

This word refers to pictures as concrete objects, e.g. framed and hung on a wall or put in a photo album. The images shown on such objects are expressed with mÌ. plus a verb of painting, drawing, printing, etc., in the factive, or in certain constructions as such a verb with an inner accusative (analogous to ‘text’; see unit 14, Objects related to language).

Etymology

NLem talf‑a
Besk teƂf ‘picture, image’
PCelt *dĂ©lw‑ā ‘figure, form, image’
PIE *dĂ©lh₁‑uÌŻâ€‘eh₂, uÌŻ-stem noun of
  PIE *delh₁‑ ‘hew, split’

Like many other culture related terms, this was a loan introduced in the TlöngĂ¶Ì€l, where a painting of a precipice plays a prominent role.

Cognates

Ir dealbh ‘statue’, Lat doleƍ ‘hurt’

kRĂ .

to work (to do a task or job)

kRidrùt. carpenter, woodworker (⇐ ⇔ kRù drÌti. ‘one working with wood or timber’)
etc.

Usage notes

While etymologically ‘work with one’s hands’, this verb now denotes mental as well as physical work. Contrast smrà. ‘function, be in operation’, which either refers to machines or to humans (or animals) doing monotonous, often mindless and tiring work.

Etymology

NLem teR‑a ‘touch (intentionally), grasp’
LMLem tùR‑a
MLem teeR‑a ‘touch’
OLem tēgh‑
PLem *tāɩ‑, Narten present of
PIE *teh₂g‑ ‘touch, grasp’

Cognates

Lat tangƍ ‘touch, grasp’; unrelated to the dance

kRĂ j.

to make wire

Etymology

NLem koRj‑a ‘(coil of) wire’
Besk koƕy ‘(curly) hair’
PCelt *góury‑os
PIE *gĂłuÌŻh₁‑riÌŻâ€‘os ‘something round, bent?’

This word appears first in the sense of ‘wire’ in a poem in the TlöngĂ¶Ì€l, a clear rip-off of a British poet’s work.

Cognates

possibly Gk ÎłáżŠÏÎżÏ‚ ‘ring, circle’

kRĂ q.

to make musical notes, tones

Etymology

NLem toRq‑a, irregular development of
Besk toƕt ‘sound’
PCelt *dĂșrd‑os, of unknown origin

The NLem outcome should be **toRta. It is strongly suspected that Ramo intentionally misspelled the word in the TlöngĂ¶Ì€l to get a softer sounding word.

krĂ .

to make a time unit, a time span of 1.318 seconds (see appendix, Time and Units of measurement)

krilrÌj. 16 time units, a time span of about 20 seconds
krilskmÌ. 256 time units, a time span of about 5Âœ minutes
kriljÌs. 4096 time units, a time span of 90 minutes
krilmrÌj. 65536 time units, a time span of 24 hours

Etymology

gender change of
NLem kard‑a, shortened form, academic loan of
Koi ÎșαρΎ᜷‑៱ ‘heart’
SHell *krÌ„dí‑ā
PIE *k̑rÌ„dí‑eh₂, iÌŻ-extension, feminine of
  PIE *kÌ‘Ă©rd‑s

The name of the basic time unit was chosen for its length of (very roughly) a heartbeat. Gender change occurred to avoid homophony with the related word kràd. ‘(heart)beat’.

doublet of krĂ d.

Cognates

Eng heart, Lat cor ‘heart’, Gk ÎșÎ±ÏÎŽÎŻÎ± ‘heart’

krĂ gw.

to be mad, insane, to behave madly

krĂšgw. mad(man)

Etymology

NLem krOgwn‑a
LMLem krùgwon‑ar
MLem kreigwon‑ar ‘bloodthirsty’
OLem krei‑gwon‑, endocentric compound (tatpurusha) of
  OLem krei‑ ‘blood (outside the body)’
PLem *krēw‑
PIE *krĂ©uÌŻh₂‑s, root noun of
  PIE *kreuÌŻh₂‑ ‘(make) bleed’
 —and—
  OLem gwon‑ ‘eager’
PLem *gwon‑
PIE *k̑uÌŻĂłn‑s ‘dog’

Cognates

Gk Îșρέας ‘flesh’; Eng hound

krĂ d.

to beat (only of the heart)

krĂšd. heart

Etymology

NLem kerd‑a
LMLem, MLem kerd‑ar
OLem kerd‑ ‘heart’
PLem *kerd‑
PIE *kÌ‘Ă©rd‑s

doublet of krĂ .

Cognates

Eng heart, Lat cor ‘heart’, Gk ÎșÎ±ÏÎŽÎŻÎ± ‘heart’

krĂ b.

to make crabs (also the constellation Cancer; see appendix, Constellations)

Etymology

NLem krobl‑a ‘castle, stronghold; crab’
LMLem akrĂČpoli‑yr ‘upper town, castle, stronghold’
Koi ጀÎșρáœčâ€‘Ï€ÎżÎ»Îč‑ς, compound of
  Koi ጄÎșÏâ€‘ÎżÏ‚ ‘sharp, topmost’
SHell *ákr‑os ‘sharp’, r-stem adjective of
PIE *h₂ek̑‑ ‘be sharp’
 —and—
  Koi πáœčλÎč‑ς ‘city’
SHell *tpóli‑s ‘fortification’
PIE *tpólh₁i‑s

The NLem metaphorical use of the word for a stronghold to denote crabs comes from their defensive exoskeleton and pincers.

The literal use lives on in two words: kroblÌc. ‘Kroblizh, Shabar Castle, the castle of Lemaria’s capital’ with a singular poststem and kroblÌj. ‘[any] castle’, the corresponding plural from.

Cognates

Lat aceƍ ‘be sour’; Eng police (via Gk πόλÎčς ‘city’)

krĂ t.

to hunt, to chase someone/something-acc

krĂšt. also the constellation Orion (see appendix, Constellations)
krÙlt. to catch (up with) someone/something-dat

kratylàs. to hunt in vain; a vain hunt, a wild-goose chase (often used with inner ten: to intend / be about to go on a wild-goose chase; ⇐ ⇔ kràt ilÌsa.)

krĂ t spĂ zy. the pursuit of happiness

Etymology

NLem, LMLem, MLem kart‑a
OLem kart‑
PLem *kars‑ ‘run’, root present of
PIE *k̑ers‑ or *k̑ers‑

Cognates

Gk áŒ˜Ï€ÎŻâ€‘ÎșÎżÏ…ÏÎżÏ‚ (Epicurus) ‘ally’ (lit. ‘one running with [someone]’), Lat currƍ ‘run’

krĂ j.

to form an ensemble of something-dat (see unit 7, Grouping numerals)

krÌj. ensemble, (mathematics) group
krĂŹj. components (with outer part to denote one or some of more components of an ensemble)

krijomÌj. council
krijrÌwb. keyboard
krijcnÌzd. plumage
krijfnÌwb. family (also the biological rank)
etc.

Etymology

NLem korj‑a
LMLem, MLem korj‑yr ‘male association’
OLem korj‑
PLem *korj‑
PIE *kĂłr‑iÌŻâ€‘os, derivation of
  PIE *kĂłr‑os ‘war’

Cognates

Ger Heer ‘army’, Gk ΚοÎčρáœčâ€‘ÎŒÎ±Ï‡ÎżÏ‚ and other proper names; unrelated to Ger Krieg ‘war’

krĂ w.

to play a trombone (or an instrument rather like it)

krĂšw. trombone player
krĂčw. trombone

Etymology

NLem karw‑a
LMLem, MLem karw‑yr ‘carynx (musical instrument)’
PCelt *karw‑ós ‘deer, stag; carynx (musical instrument)’
PIE *k̑rÌ„h₂uÌŻâ€‘Ăłs ‘deer, stag’, related to k̑rÌ„h₂n-Ăłs ‘horn’

Cognates

Eng carnyx (a musical instrument; via Gk ÎșÎŹÏÎœÏ…ÎŸ), Wel carw ‘deer, stag’

krĂ x.

to scratch someone/something-dat

krÌx. a scratch

krixfplĂšx. skyscraper

Etymology

NLem krUxr‑a
LMLem krixr‑a
MLem krixrU‑a ‘(make) bleed’
OLem krixrĂŒâ€‘
PLem *krixrƫ‑, i-reduplicated athematic present of
PIE *kreuÌŻh₂‑

Cognates

Gk Îșρέας ‘flesh’

krĂ xt.

to act/move nimbly, to make one’s actions-acc nimble

Etymology

NLem kront‑a
LMLem, MLem yrkant‑yr ‘crippled’
OLem hyrkant‑
PLem *harkans‑ ‘damage, harm’, nasal-infix present of
PIE *h₁rek̑s‑

The nasal-infix present was probably innovated in PLem as it is unlikely for a PIE root with this phonetic structure.

Cognates

Gk ጐρέχΞω ‘rend, break’

krĂ st.

to make throats

krystrÙjd. robin; redthroat; also the constellation spanning Corvus and part of Hydra (see appendix, Constellations) (see also unit 6, Bahuvrihi compounds)

Etymology

NLem karst‑a
LMLem, MLem karst‑yr
OLem karst‑
PLem *karst‑
PIE *kĆ•Ì„s‑t‑s ‘cut’, verbal adjective of
  PIE *kers‑

The throat is probably named for its function to separate head and body.

Cognates

Hit karaszi ‘cuts, separates’

krytfokĂ .

to make Antarctic

krytfokĂ r. Antarctica

Etymology

gender change of
  ModLem kryt‑fokĂšj. ‘seal hunter’, compound of
  ModLem krĂ t. ‘hunt’
NLem, LMLem, MLem kart‑a
OLem kart‑
PLem *kars‑ ‘run’, root present of
PIE *k̑ers‑
 —and—
  ModLem fokĂ j. ‘seal’, poststem from plural of
NLem fok‑a
LMLem fĂČk‑yr
Koi φ᜜Îș‑η
SHell *pháč“k‑ā, of unknown origin

Continents are usually named after people who live there or who have discovered them (see darawà.). However, as no consensus could be reached about which nation landed on Antarctica first, it was finally named after the seal hunters who travelled the Southern Ocean early on. Gender change gave the word a ‘female’ poststem, in line with the other continents’ names.

Cognates

Lat currƍ ‘run’

kroblĂ j.

to make castles

Etymology

poststem from plural of
NLem krobl‑a ‘castle, stronghold; crab’
LMLem akrĂČpoli‑yr ‘upper town, castle, stronghold’
Koi ጀÎșρáœčÏ€ÎżÎ»Îč‑ς

See krĂ b. for more.

kroblĂ c.

to make Kroblizh (Shabar Castle, the royal castle of Lemaria’s capital)

Etymology

poststem from singular of
NLem krobl‑a ‘castle, stronghold; crab’
LMLem akrĂČpoli‑yr ‘upper town, castle, stronghold’
Koi ጀÎșρáœčÏ€ÎżÎ»Îč‑ς

See krĂ b. for more.

kmĂ .

dat: may do something-acc;
to allow someone-dat to do something-acc (see unit 13, Overview of the modals)

Etymology

NLem kem‑a
LMLem kùm‑a
MLem keem‑a ‘announce, praise’
OLem kēm‑
PLem *kēm‑, Narten present of
PIE *k̑ems‑

Cognates

Eng census (via Lat cēnseƍ ‘count, opine’), Ved ƛááčsati ‘praises’

khĂ v.

to present evidence for something-acc to someone-dat;
dat, perfect: to consider something-acc evident (see unit 13, Verbs of certainty)

khĂčv. evidence

Etymology

NLem khev‑a
LMLem, MLem kehev‑a ‘call’
OLem kishidh‑
PLem *keshidh‑, e-reduplicated athematic present of
PIE *k̑eiÌŻd‑

Cognates

Ger heißen ‘be called’

khlĂ .

to make lace

Etymology

NLem kxol‑a
Besk kxoƂ
PCelt *kĂșl‑om ‘knot’, of unknown origin

Cognates

Wel cwlwm ‘knot’

khrĂ .

to make firs

Usage notes

This term is often used erroneously for other coniferous trees, especially by people living far from the Carpathian Mountains who seldom see conifers.

Etymology

gender change of
NLem kxrobj‑a
Besk kxrÄby
PCelt *kroby‑os ‘kind of tree’, of unknown origin

This is one of many Beskidic tree names introduced in the TlöngĂ¶Ì€l. ‘Female’ (zero) poststems are almost universal in trees.

khrenĂ .

to make loops, to loop

Etymology

gender change of
NLem kxreint‑a ‘kind of song sung by guests at banquets’
Besk kxreint ‘round; kind of song’
PCelt *krundi‑s ‘round’, of unknown origin

Cognates

Ir cruinn ‘round’

khnĂ .

to shout something-acc at someone-dat

Etymology

NLem kxin‑a ‘sing’
Besk kxin
PCelt *kĂĄn‑ƫ, full-grade thematic present of
PIE *kan‑

doublet of ganĂ .

Cognates

Lat canƍ ‘sing’, Ir can ‘sing’

khwĂ .

to be easygoing, nonconformist

Etymology

gender change of
NLem kxwar‑n‑a ‘unreliable, reckless, devil-may-care’, compound of
  NLem kxwar‑a ‘faeces’
LMLem, MLem kuxwar‑yr
OLem kuhwar‑
PLem *kohwar‑
PIE *kÌ‘ĂłkÊ·rÌ„
 —and—
  NLem, LMLem n‑a ‘not’
MLem ne‑a
OLem ne‑, inflected form of
PLem *ne
PIE *ne ‘no, not’

The compound is probably based on the idea of someone ‘not giving a shit’.

doublet of khwĂ c.

Cognates

Gk ÎșáœčÏ€ÏÎżÏ‚ ‘dung, filth, dirt’; Eng no

khwĂ c.

to be / act as a rogue, to behave in a rogue way, to be a rascal

Etymology

NLem kxwar‑n‑a ‘unreliable, reckless, devil-may-care’, compound of
  NLem kxwar‑a ‘faeces’
LMLem, MLem kuxwar‑yr
OLem kuhwar‑
PLem *kohwar‑
PIE *kÌ‘ĂłkÊ·rÌ„
 —and—
  NLem, LMLem n‑a ‘not’
MLem ne‑a
OLem ne‑, inflected form of
PLem *ne
PIE *ne ‘no, not’

The compound is probably based on the idea of someone ‘not giving a shit’.

doublet of khwĂ .

Cognates

Gk ÎșáœčÏ€ÏÎżÏ‚ ‘dung, filth, dirt’; Eng no

ksĂ f.

to throw a shadow, to (give) shade (to) someone/something-dat

Etymology

NLem ksef‑a
LMLem, MLem ksef‑yr
OLem ksef‑
PLem *ksef‑
PIE *kÊ·sĂ©p‑s ‘night’

doublet of ksfelĂ .

Cognates

Ved káčŁĂĄp ‘night, darkness’

ksrĂ .

to make grey, to grey

ksrynÌs. tennessine (symbol: Πο)

Etymology

NLem ksr‑a
LMLem, MLem ksr‑yr
OLem ksr‑
PLem *ksr‑, r-stem adjective of
PIE *k̑as‑

Most basic colour terms in Lemizh are r-stem Caland adjectives, perhaps motivated by the word for ‘red’.

Cognates

Eng hare (lit. ‘the grey one’), Lat cānus ‘grey, old’

ksmĂ s.

to make tree squirrels (also the constellation corresponding to Lynx and Leo Minor; see appendix, Constellations)

Usage notes

Calling someone a squirrel refers to their thrift or stinginess, often combined with a tendency to come up with unexpected presents (especially in winter). This use is only attested from Early New Lemizh.

The word might have referred to other tree-dwelling rodents in the past, but in NLem it is definitely the red squirrel, Sciurus vulgaris. Extended to tree squirrels of other continents in modern times.

Etymology

NLem ksmUs‑a
LMLem, MLem kesmUs‑yr
OLem kes‑mĂŒs‑, clarifying compound of
  OLem kes‑
PLem kes‑, of unknown origin
 —and—
  OLem mĂŒs‑ ‘mouse’
PLem *mĆ«s‑
PIE *mĂșh₂s

Cognates

Eng mouse, Lat mĆ«s ‘mouse’

ksfelĂ .

to measure time

ksfelĂč. clock, watch

Etymology

NLem ksfel‑a
LMLem ksefel‑ar ‘sundial’
MLem ksef‑el‑ar ‘sundial’, lit. ‘that which throws a narrow shadow’, agent noun, diminutive of
  MLem ksef‑yr ‘shadow, shade’
OLem ksef‑
PLem *ksef‑
PIE *kÊ·sĂ©p‑s ‘night’

doublet of ksĂ f.

Cognates

Ved káčŁĂĄp ‘night, darkness’

kfusĂ .

to imagine something-acc, to create an image/concept-acc from something-dat

Usage notes

This word is about imaginative creation of new images or concepts (good as well as bad). It contrasts with pqxarĂ ., the making of false images or concepts.

Etymology

NLem kfus‑a
LMLem, MLem kyfus‑yr ‘brain’
OLem kyfus‑
PLem *kafus‑ ‘head’
PIE *kĂĄput

Cognates

Eng head, Lat caput ‘head’

kfrĂ .

to care for something/someone-acc/dat, to deem something/someone-acc/dat important;
ambiguous (acc/dat): to be important to someone-nom

Usage notes

See kfràc. ‘make important’.

Etymology

gender change of
NLem kfror‑a ‘important’
LMLem, MLem kfrar‑yr
OLem kfrar‑
PLem *kfrar‑, r-stem adjective of
PIE *gʷreh₂‑ ‘heavy’

doublet of kfrĂ c.

Cognates

Gk ÎČαρύς ‘heavy’, Ved gurĂș ‘guru; weighty’

kfrĂ jd.

to claim something-acc (see unit 13, Verbs of certainty)

Etymology

NLem kfrOnd‑a
LMLem, MLem kfrend‑a
OLem kfrend‑ ‘claim, insist’
PLem *kfrend‑, Narten present of
PIE *kʷrend‑ ‘yell, neigh’

Cognates

Ved krándati ‘yell, neigh’

kfrĂ c.

to make important for something/someone-ben

Usage notes

This is an adjectival verb, treating importance as a property like heavy or yellow, as in ‘Sunlight is important [for plants]’. To express an emotion such as ‘You are important to me’, use the corresponding word with the ‘female’ poststem and verb-of-emotion plot usage, kfrà. ‘care for, deem important’.

Etymology

NLem kfror‑a
LMLem, MLem kfrar‑yr
OLem kfrar‑
PLem *kfrar‑, r-stem adjective of
PIE *gʷreh₂‑ ‘heavy’

doublet of kfrĂ .

Cognates

Gk ÎČαρύς ‘heavy’, Ved gurĂș ‘guru; weighty’

tĂ .

definite pronoun: to make this/that one (see unit 6, Demonstrative pronouns)

tÌ. this/that (one);
with outer causative/persuasive: therefore;
with outer temporal: at this/that time;
with outer locative: here/there;
etc.

Etymology

NLem t‑a
LMLem, MLem t‑yr ‘this, that’
OLem t‑
PLem *t‑
PIE *t‑ód

Cognates

Eng that, the, Gk τáœč ‘the’

taĂ .

to measure the circle

taĂč., τ = 2π = 6.28318530717958647692528676655900


Usage notes

The Lemizh got it right. Yes, really.

Etymology

academic loan, back formation of
Koi Ï„Î±áżŠ ‘the letter τ’, from Ï„ÏŒÏÎœÎżÏ‚ ‘lathe, compass (drawing tool)’ and ΀ΔρψÎčχόρη, the muse of dancing

Cognates

either Eng turn, or Lit tarpstĂč ‘thrive, prosper’ and probably Ger dĂŒrfen ‘may, be allowed’

tamgĂ .

to tango with someone-dat (the leader [usually the man] is in the nom and the follower [usually the lady] in the dat); a tango (action of dancing)

tamgĂš. leader in tango
tamgĂŹ. follower in tango

Etymology

NLem tamgu‑a
Ibb tamgu ‘to dance’

tĂ k.

agentive dat: to grasp something-acc;
dat, perfect: to hold something-acc (e.g. in one’s hands)

Usage notes

kĂ fk. has a similar meaning but with a connotation of force.

Etymology

NLem, LMLem, MLem tek‑a
OLem tek‑ ‘take into one’s hand(s), grasp’
PLem *tex‑ ‘acquire’, Narten present of
PIE *tek‑

Cognates

Lit tùkti ‘receive’; unrelated to Eng take

tĂ kf.

to work and teach as an academic, at university;
to teach someone-dat something-acc at university; see gwĂ t. for further plot usages

tĂŹkf. student (at university)
tÙlkf. academic degree
tĂČrkf. university building/campus

takfrĂ . lesson (at university)

Usage notes

This verb encompasses both teaching and research done by academic staff. Teaching in particular can be expressed with the compound gwattĂ kf., research by xasktĂ kf..

Also compare skholà. ‘teach in school’.

Etymology

NLem tykf‑a
LMLem, MLem otykpf‑yr ‘high-born daughter’
Ghe otəqshp ̑‑ə̄ /ɔtÉ™Ê›É“ÉŻË/ ‘daughter’

tĂ p.

to lead someone-dat to an assumption about something-acc;
dat, perfect: to assume something-acc

Usage notes

Conceptually, we assume something if it is that which is typically the case under the given circumstances; what seems to follow from the given circumstances. This is also the basis for this verb’s etymology.

Etymology

NLem tUp‑a
LMLem tÙp‑yr ‘(something) typical’
Koi Ï„áœ»Ï€â€‘ÎżÏ‚ ‘impression, mark > type’
SHell *tĂșp‑os ‘impression, mark’, nominalisation of
  SHell *tĂșpt‑ƍ ‘push, hit’, zero-grade iÌŻĂ©-present of
PIE *teuÌŻp‑, form without s-mobile of
  PIE *steuÌŻp‑

doublet of stĂ d., stedrĂ j. and stedrĂ c.

Cognates

Eng type (via Gk)

tĂ j.

to make/build/found cities, towns

tyjgmÌ. suburb (⇐ ⇔ tÌj gmÌy. ‘a town outside’)

Etymology

NLem taj‑a
LMLem, MLem taxj‑yr ‘dwelling’
OLem taçj‑
PLem *taçj‑, o-stem adjective of
PIE *tk̑eiÌŻâ€‘ ‘dwell, farm’

Cognates

Ved káčŁĂ©ti ‘dwells’, Gk ጔÎșτÎčσσα ‘found (a city)’

tĂ cd.

to make more, to make a larger amount (often with qualitative; often compounded; see unit 11, Verbs of comparison and Comparative)

Usage notes

The difficulty of locating more of something (such as knowledge, wisdom) has been a common theme in literature and other arts since Late Middle Lemizh times; e.g. qàzg tìlcdy gwÌar. in the well-known song (‘Won’t you dance for me cos I just don’t care / What’s going on today, I think there’s something more
’). Compare àst..

Etymology

gender change, anomalous poststem formation (under the influence of àst. ‘make the most’) of
NLem, LMLem tir‑a
MLem tiro‑a, back formation of
OLem comparative suffix ‑tiro‑
PLem *‑tero‑
PIE *‑tero‑s

Cognates

Eng far‑ther, Gk comparative suffix â€‘Ï„Î”ÏÎżÏ‚

tĂ cs.

to make (dry) land (as opposed to the sea)

tÙcs. (colloquial) railway train (short form of ykhtÌcs. ⇐ ⇔ Ìkh tÙcsy. ‘ship benefitting from dry land’)

Etymology

NLem tarsn‑a
LMLem, MLem tarns‑yr ‘dry land, steppe’
OLem tarns‑
PLem *tarns‑ ‘dry out, get thirsty’, nasal-infix present of
PIE *ters‑

doublet of trĂ t.

Cognates

Eng thirst, Lat terra ‘earth’

tĂ x.

to make/produce art, (an) art

tÌx. artwork

Etymology

NLem texn‑a
LMLem tùxn‑yr
Koi Ï„áœłÏ‡Îœâ€‘Î· ‘craft, art’
SHell *tĂ©khn‑ā, nominalisation of
PIE *tetk̑‑ ‘produce, create’

Cognates

Eng technical, Ved tĂĄkáčŁati ‘timbers, produces, creates’

tĂ xt.

to do duty as a prince

textĂšx. prince; also the constellation Perseus (see appendix, Constellations)
textbĂš. princess; also the constellation corresponding to Andromeda, Triangulum and Lacerta (see appendix, Constellations)

Etymology

NLem tyxt‑a
LMLem, MLem atyxt‑ar
Ghe atəxᮛ‑ā /atəχt̠ʌː/

telmĂ .

to make an electric capacitance unit, a capacitance of 0.8959 farads (see appendix, Units of measurement)

telmĂ r. (jocular, nerdy) location of a treasure

Etymology

shortened form, academic loan of
Koi Ï„áœłÎ»ÎŒÎ± ‘swamp’, possibly from
  Koi τέλλω ‘perform, accomplish’
PIE *kʷelh₁‑ ‘turn (around)’

Most electric units use the electricity is water metaphor, which relates electric capacitance to a water reservoir. A lake (Koi λ᜷ΌΜη) would have been the obvious choice, but the symbol l was already used for the mass unit.

The jocular meaning of the inner locative is based on viewing stored electricity as a treasure.

possible doublet of gwĂ j. and polnĂ .

Cognates

possibly Gk ÎșύÎșÎ»ÎżÏ‚ ‘cycle’, Ger dulden ‘tolerate, endure’

telmĂ x.

to (ride a) bicycle

telmÌx. a bicycle

Etymology

named for its inventor, one Î€Î·Î»áœłÎŒÎ±Ï‡ÎżÏ‚ (not the classical one)

texĂ .

to make/produce seeds; to make nuclei

texUadmÌc. atomic nucleus (⇐ ⇔ texÌ admÌcU. ‘atom’s nucleus’)
texUxUxtrÌ. comet nucleus
texUxtrÌj. planet’s core
texUsklontÌ. cell nucleus
etc.

Usage notes

The various kinds of nuclei are usually just called texÌ. in their respective disciplines and contexts. Use above compounds only if diffenentiation is necessary.

Etymology

NLem tex‑a
LMLem tùx‑yr
MLem teex‑yr ‘seed, offspring’
OLem tēh‑
PLem *tewh‑
PIE *teuÌŻk‑ós

Poststem formation was inhibited by tàx. ‘art’, which is saying something about Lemizh priorities, or at least perspective on life.

Cognates

Eng thigh, OCS tukƭ ‘fat, grease’

tUxĂ .

to happen by chance

tUxĂ ., tUxĂ l. chance, luck

Etymology

NLem tUx‑a
LMLem tÙx‑yr
Koi ΀᜻χ‑η ‘Tyche (the Goddess of luck)’
SHell *tĂșkh‑ā ‘luck, fortune’, nominalisation, zero-grade root stative of
PIE *dÊ°euÌŻgʰ‑ ‘hit, produce something useful’

Cognates

Ger tĂŒchtig ‘capable, efficient’, Ved duhĂ© ‘give milk’

tlOnĂ .

tlOnÒl. TlöngĂ¶Ì€l (the epic novel defining the onset of New Lemizh)

Etymology

NLem tlOn‑a ‘endure, pluck up courage’
LMLem tlùn‑a
Koi Ï„Î»áż†ÎœÎ±Îč, nasal-infix present of
PIE *telh₂‑ ‘lift up, take upon oneself’

This verb is only used for the name of the epic. The modern form for all other purposes is klĂ j..

Cognates

Eng thole, tolerate (via Lat tolerƍ ‘endure’), Lat tollƍ ‘lift up, take away’

trĂ .

to make three individuals

Etymology

NLem trO‑a
LMLem trù‑yl
MLem tree‑yl
OLem trē‑
PLem *trē‑
PIE *trĂ©iÌŻâ€‘es

Cognates

Eng three, Gk Ï„ÏÎ”áż–Ï‚ ‘three’

trĂ gc.

to make music; the art of music

Etymology

NLem trUgj‑a
LMLem, MLem trigj‑yr
PCelt *trígy‑os, of unknown origin

trĂ d.

to twist something-dat into some shape-acc; to break something-dat into something-acc [e.g. into parts, in two] by torsion;
dat: to twist; to break into something-acc by torsion

Usage notes

The ‘deforming’ and ‘destroying’ meanings are distinguished by the acc object or – often simpler – by instead using a nominal verb expressing a shape, versus nominal verbs such as skràp. ‘split, turn into parts’, dwà. ‘turn into two [parts]’, etc.

Etymology

gender change of
NLem, LMLem, MLem tar‑a
OLem tarh‑ ‘drill, rub’
PLem *tarh‑, root present of
PIE *terh₁‑

doublet of trĂ w.

Cognates

Lat terƍ ‘rub’, possibly Eng throw

trĂ t.

to make ash(es)

Etymology

NLem tart‑a
LMLem, MLem tart‑yr
OLem tart‑
PLem *tars‑ ‘dry’, o-stem adjective of
PIE *ters‑ ‘dry out, get thirsty’

doublet of tĂ cs.

Cognates

Eng thirst, Lat terra ‘earth’

trĂ w.

to perform witchcraft

trĂšw. witch; also the constellation Virgo (see appendix, Constellations)

Usage notes

The idea that witches often come in threes is nicely matched by the phonological similarity to trÌ. ‘three’.

Etymology

NLem trom‑a
LMLem tràmi‑yr ‘gut’
Koi τρᜱΌÎč‑ς, nominalisation of
SHell *tĂ©r‑mi ‘drill, rub’, root present of
PIE *terh₁‑

The NLem word literally means ‘gut-maker’; the concept was probably ‘someone making the guts whole = someone healing the innards’. Gender change was inhibited by the word trÌ..

doublet of trĂ d.

Cognates

Lat terƍ ‘rub’, possibly Eng throw

trĂ xk.

to make beavers (also the constellation spanning Canis Minor and part of Hydra; see appendix, Constellations)

Etymology

NLem troxk‑a
LMLem, MLem troxk‑ar
OLem troçk‑ ‘gnaw to pieces’
PLem *troçk‑, sk̑-present of
PIE *treh₃g̑‑ ‘gnaw through’

Cognates

Gk Ï„ÏáœœÎłÏ‰ ‘gnaw through’, TochB treáčŁáčŁĂ€áčƒ â€˜chews (through)’

tnĂ dw.

to do duty as a captain, to captain a ship or crew-dat

tnĂšdw. captain

Etymology

NLem tondw‑a
LMLem, MLem etondb‑ar
Ghe etostpʱ‑ā /ɛtɔndʱbʱʌː/

tnĂ k.

to make bones

Etymology

NLem tank‑a
LMLem, MLem tank‑yr
OLem tank‑ ‘bony’
PLem *tanx‑ ‘thin’, o-stem adjective of
PIE *tenh₂‑

Cognates

Eng thin, Lat tenuis ‘thin, weak, slight’

tmĂ .

to make unexpected, to lead to an expectation opposite to something-acc [given previous information]

tmÌ. but, even (often in a compound with the unexpected object; for ‘even’, this object has an inner partitive; see pragmatics page II, Pragmatic adverbs and expressives)

Etymology

NLem tam‑a ‘(unpleasant) surprise’
LMLem, MLem tamn‑yr ‘(surprise) attack’
OLem tamnh‑ ‘cut’
PLem *tamnh‑, nasal-infix present of
PIE *temh₁‑

Cognates

Eng contempt (via Lat con‑temnƍ ‘despise’), Gk τέΌΜω ‘cut’

txĂ .

to make/prepare (black) tea from Camellia sinensis or other plants (see connotations)

txÌ. tea (beverage)
txĂŹ. tea ([dried] leaves)

txilĂ bv. to make/prepare white tea
txilĂ xw. to make green tea
txiwrĂ f. to make black tea
txiflĂ c. to make oolong
(all with inner acc for the beverage and inner dat for the leaves)

Usage notes

This is the word for tea from the plant Camellia sinensis and, by extension, for other strongly aromatic sorts of tea, especially spiced teas.

Etymology

NLem tha‑a ‘black tea’
Man 茶
OCh 荌 /*rlaː, laː, ÉŠlja/ ‘a bitter tasting plant, tea’
PST *s-la ‘leaf, tea?, flat object’

The MLem word was li‑yr < OTroy ÏČλÎč‑α /ˈhlia/ < OCh, before it was re-loaned from Man.

Cognates

Eng tea, chai

txĂ b.

to make tunnels

txÙb. (colloquial; especially in Shabar, the Lemizh capital) underground railway train, tube train (short form of ykhtxÌb. ⇐ ⇔ Ìkh txÙby. ‘ship benefitting from tunnels’)

Etymology

NLem txubl‑a
LMLem txubl‑yr
MLem txublu‑yr ‘cave’
OLem txu‑blu‑, exocentric compound (bahuvrihi) of
  OLem txu‑ ‘doubtful, indecisive’
PLem *txu‑, u-stem adjective of
PIE *deh₂‑ ‘split’
 —and—
  OLem blu‑ ‘strong’
PLem *blu‑, u-stem adjective of
PIE *bel‑

The Old Lemizh seemed to have named caves as places ‘of doubtful strength/stability’.

Cognates

Gk ÎŽÎ±ÎŻÎżÎŒÎ±Îč ‘divide’; Gk ÎČÎ”Î»Ï„ÎŻÏ‰Îœ ‘better’

txatxĂ f.

to make mercury, quicksilver (symbol: ΄)

Etymology

NLem tsatxaf‑a
LMLem etstxaf‑yr
MLem etst‑xaf‑yr, compound of
  MLem etst‑yr ‘silver’
Ghe ets᎛‑ə̄ /ɛts̟tÌ ÉŻË/
 —and—
  MLem xaf‑yr ‘water’
OLem xaf‑ ‘water, stream’
PLem *xaf‑ ‘water’ [animate], ‘stream’
PIE *hâ‚‚Ă©p‑s

Cognates

Ved ā́p ‘water’, Ir abhainn ‘river’

txĂ sk.

to make loud, to make/produce a noise (level), a sound

Etymology

NLem txusk‑a
LMLem txutk‑a
MLem txut‑k‑a, compound of
  MLem txut‑yr ‘silent’
OLem txut‑
PLem *txus‑, o-stem adjective of
PIE *th₂euÌŻs‑ ‘be silent’
 —and—
  MLem k‑a ‘opposition’
Ghe q‑a /qa/

Cognates

Hit tuhussiyezzi ‘watches quietly’

txeklĂ w.

to make ivory

Etymology

NLem tsetlOw‑a
LMLem etst‑elùfa‑yr, compound of
  LMLem, MLem etst‑yr ‘silver’
Ghe ets᎛‑ə̄ /ɛts̟tÌ ÉŻË/
 —and—
  LMLem elĂšfa‑yr ‘elephant’
Koi áŒÎ»áœłÏ†áŸ±â€‘Ï‚
SHell *elĂ©phan‑s, probably from an Afro-Asiatic language

Ivory was called ‘elephant silver’ for its value und bright colour. This didn’t help the elephants in any way.

txoixĂ .

to govern a country, a people etc.-dat

Etymology

NLem tsoixe‑a ‘expert’
  NLem tsoixe‑soux‑a ‘chef’

See soĂ x. for further information.

tfĂ d.

to make forests, woods

Etymology

NLem tfydR‑a
LMLem, MLem ytfydlz‑yr
Ghe əᮛf‑əᮛsËĄâ€‘É™Ì„ /ət̠ɞədÌ ËĄzÌŸÉŻË/, compound of
  Ghe əᮛf‑ə̄ /ətÌ ÉžÉŻË/ ‘night’
 —and—
  Ghe ᮛsËĄâ€‘É™Ì„ /dÌ ËĄzÌŸÉŻË/ ‘green’

pĂ .

to ask (interrogate) someone-dat about something-acc (see unit 16, Questions, imperative and exclamations)

là pÙla. to answer something-acc to someone-dat

Etymology

NLem pi‑a
LMLem pì‑a
MLem pii‑a ‘sing’
OLem pī‑
PLem *pī‑, root present of
PIE *peiÌŻh₂‑

The semantic connection to ‘sing’ is probably the rising tone at the end of questions (in older forms of Lemizh).

doublet of pevrĂ .

Cognates

OCS pojǫ ‘sing’

pĂ bc.

to make/produce poison, venom

pĂŹbc. slightly vulgar: damn, bloody (intensifier)

Etymology

NLem pibc‑a
LMLem pìp‑abgc‑yr, clarifying compound of
  LMLem pĂŹp‑yr
MLem piip‑yr
OLem pīp‑
PLem *piwf‑ ‘drink’, i-reduplicated athematic present of
PIE *peh₃‑
 —and—
  LMLem, MLem abgc‑yr ‘bitter’
Ghe apqshˇ‑ə̄ /abÉąÊ’ÉŻË/

Cognates

Lat bibƍ ‘drink’

pĂ t.

to make correct, right; to correct, fix, repair something-dat

pĂšt pĂšpe. daddy doing [it/everything] right, daddy is right [about everything], a phrase loved by little and loathed by older children

Etymology

NLem pet‑a
LMLem, MLem pet‑yr
OLem pet‑
PLem *pesh‑ ‘be happy’, Narten present of
PIE *pek̑‑

Cognates

OEng ÄĄefēon ‘rejoice’, Lit pĂșoĆĄiu ‘decorate’

pĂ p.

to become a dad(dy)-nom

pĂšp. dad(dy) of someone-acc

Etymology

baby talk for psrùb. ‘father’

pĂ z.

to make feet

Etymology

NLem pOz‑a
LMLem pÒz‑yr
MLem pOOz‑yr
OLem pöz‑
PLem *pƍz‑
PIE *páč“d‑s

Cognates

Eng foot, Gk Ï€ÎżÏÏ‚ ‘foot’

pĂ v.

to make straight, to straighten

Etymology

NLem pevn‑a
LMLem pùvont‑yr
MLem peevont‑yr
OLem pē‑dhont‑, compound of
  OLem pē‑ ‘kind of official, probably of the clergy’
PLem *pē‑, Narten present of
PIE *peh₁iÌŻâ€‘ ‘rebuke’
 —and—
  OLem dhont‑ ‘tooth’
PLem *edhont‑
PIE *h̄₁d‑ónt‑s, Narten present active participle of
  PIE *h₁ed‑ ‘eat’

Apparently, high-ranking people were known for their straight teeth in Old Lemizh times.

Cognates

Ved pī́yati ‘rebuke’; Eng tooth

pĂ w.

to fold something-dat into something-acc (e.g. in two)

Etymology

NLem pewl‑a
LMLem pùfil‑a
MLem peefil‑a
OLem pēfil‑
PLem *pēfel‑ ‘butterfly’
PIE *peiÌŻpĂ©l‑os

Cognates

Lat pāpiliƍ ‘butterfly’

pĂ x.

to make leaves (of plants)

pyxpxlÌj. flat leaf , e.g. of a flowering plant, as opposed to a conifer’s needle (⇐ ⇔ pÌx pxlÌjy.)
pyxxÌk. needle, e.g. of a conifer, as opposed to a flat leaf (⇐ ⇔ pÌx xÙky. ‘pointy leaf’)

Etymology

NLem pex‑a
LMLem pùx‑yr ‘pine needle > leaf’
MLem peex‑yr ‘pine’
OLem pēç‑
PLem *pewç‑
PIE *pĂ©uÌŻk̑‑eh₂

Cognates

Ger Fichte ‘spruce’, Gk πΔύÎșη ‘pine’

pĂ sk.

to make fish

pyskdwÌ. Pisces (see appendix, Constellations)

Etymology

NLem pesk‑a
LMLem pùsk‑yr
MLem peesk‑yr
OLem pēsk‑
PLem *pēsk‑
PIE *pĂ©iÌŻsk̑‑os

Cognates

Eng fish, Lat piscis ‘fish’

pĂ f.

to place a person-acc upright somewhere-dat etc.;
self-transporting: to stand up, get up, perfect: to stand somewhere ditto;

Usage notes

This verb is not used for objects whose position can be determined with spatial verbs alone (see ‘stand’ in the English / Lemizh dictionary). It is only needed to distinguish a standing from a sitting or squatting person, whose coordinate systems share the same orientation.

Etymology

NLem, LMLem pifn‑a
MLem pif‑ne‑a ‘stand (still)’, compound of
  MLem pif‑a ‘move (purposefully)’
OLem pifh‑ ‘move’ [intr.]
PLem *pifh‑, i-reduplicated athematic present of
PIE *peh₁‑
 —and—
  MLem ne‑a ‘not’
OLem ne‑, inflected form of
PLem *ne
PIE *ne ‘no, not’

Cognates

Ved vi-pipāná- ‘sorting out’, probably Hit pippanzi ‘overturn’

pevrĂ .

to make larks

Usage notes

The lark has been used as a metaphor for early wakers since Early New Lemizh, especially for those with a purposeful or persuasive air about them. See also mÌsw. ‘owl’.

Etymology

NLem pevr‑a
LMLem pùqur‑yr
MLem peequr‑yr
OLem pēthur‑
PLem *pēthor‑
PIE *pĂ©iÌŻh₂‑tor‑s ‘singer’, event agent of
  PIE *peiÌŻh₂‑ ‘sing’

Poststem formation was inhibited by the word pĂ v..

doublet of pĂ .

Cognates

OCS pojǫ ‘sing’

pifĂ .

dat: to develop

Usage notes

This verb does not express a judgement about the direction of the development. Use pifprĂ . to express progress or improvement.

Etymology

NLem pif‑fo‑a, compound of
  NLem, LMLem, MLem pif‑a ‘move (purposefully)’
OLem pifh‑ ‘move’ [intr.]
PLem *pifh‑, i-reduplicated athematic present of
PIE *peh₁‑
 —and—
  NLem fo‑a ‘far’, inflected form of
LMLem, MLem afo ‘from’
OLem afo
PLem *afo
PIE *apo

Cognates

Ved vi-pipāná- ‘sorting out’; Eng of, off

pifnĂ .

dat: to evolve; evolution

Usage notes

This is the biological sense of the word. See also pifà. ‘develop’ and pifprà. ‘progress, improve’.

Etymology

NLem pif‑en‑a, compound of
  NLem, LMLem, MLem pif‑a ‘move (purposefully)’
OLem pifh‑ ‘move’ [intr.]
PLem *pifh‑, i-reduplicated athematic present of
PIE *peh₁‑
 —and—
  NLem en‑a ‘between’, inflected form of
LMLem, MLem en
OLem hen ‘in’
PLem *hen
PIE *h₁en

Coined in analogy to pifà. and pifprà., the concept being that of living beings constantly moving ‘between’ bounding conditions for fitness with regard to their environment.

Cognates

Ved vi-pipāná- ‘sorting out’; Eng in

pifprĂ .

dat: to progress, improve; to improve something-dat

Usage notes

see pifĂ .

Etymology

NLem pif‑prO‑a, compound of
  NLem, LMLem, MLem pif‑a ‘move (purposefully)’
OLem pifh‑ ‘move’ [intr.]
PLem *pifh‑, i-reduplicated athematic present of
PIE *peh₁‑
 —and—
  NLem prO‑a ‘front’, inflected form of
LMLem prÒ ‘in front of’
MLem prOO
OLem prö
PLem *prƍ
PIE *prƍ ‘forth’

Cognates

Ved vi-pipāná- ‘sorting out’; Lat prƍ ‘for, in front of’

polnĂ .

to list something-dat, to make/write lists of something-dat (Grouping numeral, see unit 7)

polnÌ. a list of things-dat

Usage notes

Having to write lists, or having to work through lists, can cause physical nausea, as the Lemizh as well as the Ethiynic are well aware. — Hence the negative connotation of the word, its implication of tediousness.

Etymology

Eth bolná ‘scroll > list’
PWald *kholn‑á ‘roll, cylinder’, nominalisation of
  PWald *kholnᾗ‑mi ‘turn, roll’, nasal-infix present of
PIE *kʷelh₁‑ ‘turn (around)’

doublet of gwĂ j. and possible doublet of telmĂ .

Cognates

Gk ÎșύÎșÎ»ÎżÏ‚ ‘cycle’, Ger dulden ‘tolerate, endure’

podaRĂ g.

to play the timpani

podaRĂšg. timpanist; also the star ÎČ Trianguli Australis
podaRĂčg. timpani

Etymology

NLem podaRugn‑a
Besk podaƕugn ‘drum’
PCelt *bodar‑ágn‑os, instrumental noun of
  PCelt *bodar‑ós ‘deaf’, r-stem adjective of
PIE *bʰedʰh₁‑ ‘deafen’

doublet of wdrĂ g.

Cognates

Ir bodhrán ‘kind of drum’, Ved badhirá ‘deaf’

potmĂ s.

to make an electric current or magnetic potential unit, a current/potential of 43.72 milliamperes (see appendix, Units of measurement)

Etymology

shortened form, academic loan of
Koi Ï€ÎżÏ„Î±ÎŒâ€‘áœčς ‘river’, probably related to
Koi Ï€áż‘ÌÏ€Ï„â€‘Ï‰ ‘fall’
SHell *pī́pt‑ƍ, i-reduplicated thematic present of
PIE *peth₂‑ ‘fly (up)’

Most electric units use the electricity is water metaphor, which relates an electric current to running water.

Cognates

Eng hippo‑potamus; probably feather, petition (via Lat petƍ ‘ask, request’)

plĂ k.

to unlock something-dat, to open a lock-acc to something-dat

plÌk. a lock
plĂčk. key

Etymology

NLem, LMLem, MLem pylk‑a, reanalysis of
OLem pylkanh‑ ‘cover, conceal > lock’
PLem *palkanh‑ ‘cover, conceal’, nĂ©H-present of
PIE *pelk‑

The n was reanalysed as a negation in late OLem, after the syncope of stem-final h.

Cognates

Eng feal ‘hide’

plĂ vg.

to make mould, to go mouldy

Etymology

NLem plOvgc‑a
LMLem pleqkc‑yr
MLem pleqkcU‑yr ‘rot, mould’
OLem plethk‑zhĂŒâ€‘, compound of
  OLem plethk‑ ‘spread’ [of diseases, rumours]
PLem *plethx‑ ‘spread (out)’, Narten present of
PIE *pleth₂‑
 —and—
  OLem zhĂŒâ€‘ ‘make dirty’
PLem *dzƫ‑ ‘smoke’, root present of
PIE *dÊ°uÌŻeh₂‑

Cognates

Gk πλατύς ‘wide, flat’; Gk ÎžáżĄÌÏ‰ ‘sacrifice by burning’

plĂ w.

to blow at someone/something-dat

Usage notes

‘blowing at someone’ (but not ‘blowing at something’, or using the verb without a dat object) has undertones of blowing noisily, and/or having a smelly breath. Use xàz. if you want to avoid that.

Etymology

NLem plOm‑a
LMLem plùm‑yr ‘lung’
MLem pleem‑yr
OLem plēm‑
PLem *plēm‑
PIE *plĂ©uÌŻâ€‘m‑os, m-stem noun of
  PIE *pleuÌŻâ€‘ ‘float’

Cognates

Eng flow, Lat pluit ‘it rains’ and pulmƍ ‘lung’; unrelated to Eng blow

plOqkĂ j.

to infect someone-dat (of bacteria)

plOqkĂšj. bacterium

Etymology

poststem from plural of
NLem plOqk‑a ‘foul air, airborne disease’
LMLem, MLem pleqk‑a ‘spread’ [of diseases, rumours]
OLem plethk‑
PLem *plethx‑ ‘spread (out)’, Narten present of
PIE *pleth₂‑

Cognates

Gk πλατύς ‘wide, flat’, Lit plintĂč ‘spread’

plUpĂ .

to make scorpions (also the constellation corresponding to Scorpius and Libra; see appendix, Constellations)

Etymology

NLem plUp‑a
LMLem olpìp‑yr
MLem ol‑piip‑yr, compound of
  MLem ol‑yr ‘needle, sting’
OLem hol‑ ‘awl’
PLem *hol‑
PIE *h₁ól‑os
 —and—
  MLem piip‑yr ‘poison’
OLem pīp‑
PLem *piwf‑ ‘drink’, i-reduplicated athematic present of
PIE *peh₃‑

Cognates

Eng awl; Lat bibƍ ‘drink’

prĂ .

to make points / an area in front of something-nom (see unit 12, Temporal and spatial verbs)

prexnÌ., prÌ. east (symbol: p)
prilkexnÌ., prilkÌ. west (symbol: g, i.e. a turned p)

prilnedjÌt. midday (⇐ prilnÌ djÌte.)
prilneytfÌ. midnight

Etymology

NLem prO‑a, inflected form of
LMLem prÒ ‘in front of’
MLem prOO
OLem prö
PLem *prƍ
PIE *prƍ ‘forth’

Cognates

Lat prƍ ‘for, in front of’

prĂ g.

to make towers

prigtxeklÌw. ivory tower; also the constellation in the region of Ara, Triangulum Australe, Circinus and Musca (see appendix, Constellations) (⇐ ⇔ prÌg txeklÌwi.)

Etymology

NLem pUrg‑a
LMLem pÙrg‑yr
Koi Ï€áœ»ÏÎłâ€‘ÎżÏ‚ ‘tower, castle’
SHell *pĂșrg‑os, possibly (via Urartian or some other language)
PIE *bʰerg̑ʰ‑ ‘rise’

possible doublet of wrĂ gc.

Cognates

may be related to Ger Burg ‘castle, stronghold’

prĂ k.

to request something-acc from someone-dat

Usage notes

This verb typically refers to friendly requests.

Etymology

NLem, LMLem, MLem park‑a
OLem park‑
PLem *park‑, sk̑-present of
PIE *prek̑‑ ‘ask’

Cognates

Eng postulate (via Lat postulƍ ‘request’), Ger fragen ‘ask (interrogate)’

prĂ t.

to barely/just do something-acc;
acc: to barely/just happen

Etymology

NLem, LMLem, MLem part‑a
OLem part‑
PLem *pars‑ ‘try’, s-desiderative of
PIE *per‑ ‘traverse’

Cognates

Eng fare, Gk πΔ᜷ρω ‘pierce, run through’

prĂ j.

to make beautiful, to beautify

Usage notes

This word is used for anything aesthetically pleasing to the senses, including tastes and smells.

Etymology

NLem prUn‑a
LMLem prìn‑yr ‘pleasing, dear’ [of things]
MLem priin‑yr ‘pleasing, dear’
OLem prīn‑ ‘please, be dear’
PLem *prīn‑, nasal-infix present of
PIE *preiÌŻH‑

Cognates

Ved prÄ«áč‡ÄÌti ‘pleases’; for some reason unrelated to Prague and Ger Pracht ‘splendour’

prĂ xt.

to make red deer (Cervus elaphus and, by extension, other species of Old World deer; also the constellation Stag, corresponding to Lyra and Hercules; see appendix, Constellations)

prùxt. (harsh) social critic, lit. ‘deer-maker’

Usage notes

Calling people red deer or saying they behave like deer (là prÌxtem.) refers to them quarrelling fruitlessly. The idea is that of two stags having got their antlers interlocked in their fight. This is a fairly recent metaphor. Calling a social critic a ‘deer-maker’ probably refers to them pointing out useless quarrels among people, thereby turning them metaphorically into red deer.

Etymology

NLem prunt‑a ‘stag’
LMLem prĂčnt‑yr
MLem pruont‑yr
OLem pruont‑
PLem *pruont‑
PIE *pru‑ónt‑s ‘jumper’, Narten present active participle of
  PIE *preuÌŻâ€‘ ‘jump’

Cognates

Eng frog, Ved pravanta ‘jump’

proxĂ .

to make badgers (Meles meles and, by extension, other species of this genus)

Usage notes

In Lemizh mythology, female badgers often serve as messengers and negotiators. Accordingly, a qualitative bracket with proxÌ. can express a messengers or negotiator, and là proxÌem. means ‘to convey a message’ ot ‘to negotiate on behalf of someone else’.

Etymology

gender change of
NLem proxekx‑a
Besk prÄxÀkx
PCelt *brokk‑os, of unknown origin

doublet of proxĂ kh.

Cognates

Ir broc ‘badger’

proxĂ kh.

to make woodland creatures

proxĂČrkh. woodland (especially regarding the fauna)

Etymology

NLem proxekx‑a ‘badger’
Besk prÄxÀkx
PCelt *brokk‑os, of unknown origin

doublet of proxĂ .

Cognates

Ir broc ‘badger’

pnĂ .

to make five individuals

‘make five’, a version of an old language game for five players, focusing on abstract thought. Other versions of this game are for four, seven or ten players, and named accordingly. The cover term for the game is dmĂ j. ‘fill (up), make full > make quite a lot’.

Etymology

NLem pin‑a
LMLem, MLem pin‑yl
OLem ping‑, inflected form of
PLem *pengwe
PIE *pĂ©nkÊ·e

possible doublet of pnĂ gc.

Cognates

Eng five, Gk πέΜτΔ ‘five’

pnĂ gc.

to act in a terrible way, to do something-acc terrible

Etymology

NLem pangj‑a
LMLem, MLem pangdj‑ar ‘determined, authoritative’
OLem pangdj‑
PLem *pangdj‑
PIE *pĆ„Ì„kʷ‑sti‑s ‘fist’, possibly from
  PIE *pĂ©nkÊ·e ‘five’

possible doublet of pnĂ .

Cognates

Eng fist, possibly Eng five

pnĂ b.

to make fauns

pnùb. the god Faunus/Pan, lit. ‘maker/father of fauns’

Etymology

gender change of
NLem pan‑a
LMLem pàn‑yr
Koi Π៱́Μ ‘Pan’, probably from
PIE *peh₂- ‘protect, shepherd’

Cognates

probably Ved PĆ«áčŁan ‘a Vedic deity’, Eng pasture (via Lat pāscƍ ‘feed, graze’)

pxlĂ j.

to make plain(s), to make (a) flat (surface), (geometry) to make a plane

Etymology

NLem pxloj‑a
LMLem palxĂČj‑yr ‘(flat) pasture land’
MLem palxouj‑yr
OLem pal‑xouj‑, compound of
  OLem palx‑ ‘flat’
PLem *palx‑, root present of
PIE *pleh₂‑
 —and—
  OLem xouj‑ ‘pasture’
PLem *xowj‑
PIE *h₂óuÌŻi‑s ‘sheep’

Cognates

Eng floor, Eng plain (via Lat plānus ‘flat, intelligible’); Eng ewe

psĂ x.

to make psyches, souls

Usage notes

This is the Ancient Greek concept of the ‘metaphysic shadow’, the immortal part of a human and possibly other animals. It differs from our monotheistic soul in that it is not the human’s essence; the Greeks didn’t identify with their psyches but with their bodies. The Iliad’s lines 3 and 4 may clarify this viewpoint:
  Ï€ÎżÎ»Î»áœ°Ï‚ ή’ áŒ°Ï†ÎžÎŻÎŒÎżÏ…Ï‚ ψυχᜰς ጌϊΎÎč Ï€ÏÎżÎÎ±ÏˆÎ”Îœ
  áŒĄÏÏŽÏ‰Îœ, Î±áœÏ„Îżáœșς ÎŽáœČ ጑λώρÎčα Ï„Î”áżŠÏ‡Î” ÎșύΜΔσσÎčÎœ
‘[Achilles’s wrath] hurled many valiant psyches of heroes down to Hades, and made themselves a prey to dogs 
’

Compare RĂ g..

Etymology

NLem psUx‑a
LMLem psUx‑yr
Koi ÏˆáżĄÏ‡â€‘áœ”, nominalisation of
  Koi ÏˆáżĄÌÏ‡â€‘Ï‰ ‘blow’
SHell *psĆ«Ìkh‑ƍ, of uncertain origin

pslĂ .

to cut something-dat into something-acc [e.g. pieces, in two] with scissors

pslĂŹ. euphemistic: darn, bloody (intensifier)
pslĂč. scissors; a kind of steel used for making high-quality scissors

Etymology

NLem pslU‑a
LMLem psalì‑yr
Koi ψαλ᜷‑ς, of unknown origin

psrĂ b.

to father a child-acc;
dat: to conceive a child-acc

psrĂšb. father of someone-acc
psrĂŹb. mother of someone-acc (rare)
psrÌb. child (son, daughter) of a father-nom and a mother-dat

psrebqlÌp. plastic (⇐ ⇔ psrÌb qlÌpe. ‘child of tar’)

Usage notes

Metaphoric use of ‘child’ for younger people who are not the speaker’s sons or daughters, either affectionate or patronising, has been common at least since Early New Lemizh.

Etymology

gender change of
NLem pser‑a
LMLem, MLem pyser‑yr ‘someone’s child, son’
OLem pyser‑
PLem *paser‑ ‘father’
PIE *phÌ„â‚‚tĂ©r‑s

Cognates

Eng father, Gk Ï€Î±Ï„ÎźÏ ‘father’

psrĂ xk.

to make froth, foam, to froth something-dat, to foam

Etymology

NLem psronk‑a
LMLem, MLem prusank‑a ‘snort, froth’
OLem prusank‑
PLem *prusanx‑, nasal-infix present of
PIE *preuÌŻth₂‑

Cognates

Eng froth, Ved próthati ‘snorts, pants’

pqĂ b.

to be angry with someone-dat/causal-receiving, about something-acc/causal-transporting (see unit 3, Ambiguous usage);
agentive caus, causal-reflexive: to anger someone-nom

Usage notes

Anger being a potentially constructive emotion has been recognised since Early New Lemizh times. In Modern Lemizh, this verb mainly evokes an energetic, extroverted kind of reaction.

Etymology

gender change of
NLem pfi‑a
LMLem pifì‑yr ‘bulge’ [noun]
MLem pifii‑yr
OLem pifī‑ ‘swell’
PLem *pifī‑, i-reduplicated athematic present of
PIE *peiÌŻh₁‑

For some strange reason, masculinisation is common in verbs of emotion; see spàz. ‘be happy’.

Cognates

Ved pínvate ‘swells’

pqĂ ht.

to count something-dat

pqĂčht. a number

Usage notes

Originally meaning natural numbers, the tool noun’s meaning has been extended to negative, real and complex numbers in modern times. This of course reflects the development of modern mathematics and parallels our use of the word. The verbal usage is also relatively new.

Etymology

NLem pfeht‑a ‘number’
LMLem Opfùhtt‑yr
MLem Opfeihtt‑yr
Ghe öp ̑eishᮛt‑ə̄ /Ɠɓɛ͜ÉȘʃtÌ tɯː/

pqxarĂ .

to fantasise about something-acc

Usage notes

This word is about making false images or concepts. It contrasts with kfusĂ ., the imaginative creation of new images or concepts.

Etymology

NLem pqxar‑a
LMLem, MLem piqxar‑yr ‘wing’
OLem pithxar‑
PLem *pethxar‑ ‘feather’
PIE *pĂ©th₂‑rÌ„, r-stem noun of
  PIE *peth₂‑ ‘spread (one’s wings), fly (up)’

doublet of ftnĂ k.

Cognates

Eng pen (via Lat penna ‘feather, quill pen’)

jĂ .

relative pronoun type I level n−5: see unit 6, Relative pronouns

Etymology

NLem, LMLem, MLem j‑a, formed after the Ghean relative pronouns
a f‑a s‑a sh‑a x‑a / fˇ‑a sˇ‑a shˇ‑a xˇ‑a
/a Éža s̟a ʃa χa / ÎČa z̟a ʒa ʁa/

jĂ k.

to make mouths

Etymology

NLem jek‑a
LMLem jek‑yr
MLem jek‑yr ‘mouth, oral cavity’
OLem jek‑
PLem *jex‑ ‘speak’, Narten present of
PIE *iÌŻek‑

Cognates

Eng joke (via Lat iocus), Ger Gicht ‘gout’

jĂ t.

to give a name to someone-dat, to call, name someone-dat something-acc after someone-psu

jÌt. a name

Etymology

NLem jet‑a
LMLem jùt‑a
MLem jeet‑a ‘call (by name)’
OLem jēt‑ ‘call, rouse’
PLem *jews‑ ‘notice, awake’, Narten present of
PIE *iÌŻeuÌŻt‑

Cognates

OCS oĆĄtuĆĄtÇ« ‘sense, notice’

jawrĂ .

to make jaguars (also the constellation in the region of Apus and Chamaeleon; see appendix, Constellations)

Etymology

NLem jawar‑a
< Old Tupi ĂźaĂ»ara ‘jaguar’

Cognates

Eng jaguar

jĂ x.

to move something-acc somewhere-dat etc., also non-sending; a body part-acc;
self-transporting: to move (a distance), to go somewhere ditto by train etc.-ins

jĂčx. engine, motor
jĂŹrx. to put something-acc somewhere ditto; self-transporting: to arrive
jĂšrx. self-transporting: to leave, depart

jyxhlĂ . to salt something-dat
jyxsrĂ x. to sugar something-dat
etc.

jixdwĂ w. to bottle something-acc
jixRĂ xt. to shoulder something-acc
etc.

jirxvìrsk. to misplace something-acc, self-transporting: to get lost (⇐ vàsk jìrxi. ‘put erroneously’)

Etymology

gender change of
NLem, LMLem, MLem j‑a
OLem j‑
PLem *j‑, root present of
PIE *h₁eiÌŻâ€‘

Gender change occurred to avoid homophony with the pronoun jĂ ., as pronouns referring to verbs were becoming more common during the last centuries.

Cognates

Gk ΔጶΌÎč ‘come, go’, Lat eƍ ‘go’

jĂ xw.

to make bile

jĂšxw. liver

Etymology

NLem jexw‑a
LMLem jùxw‑yr
MLem jeexw‑yr, haplology of
OLem jēxwyr‑
PLem *jēxwar‑ ‘liver’
PIE *iÌŻáž—kÊ·rÌ„

Cognates

Gk ጧπαρ ‘liver’, Lat iecur ‘liver’

jĂ s.

to make 4096 individuals

Usage notes

The number 1000 has traditionally been seen as unlucky, attested from Old Lemizh. Fortunately, it is no longer a round number (1000dec = 3E8hex) and can easily be avoided.

Etymology

NLem jesl‑a
LMLem, MLem jesl‑yl
OLem jesl‑ ‘thousand’
PLem *gjesl‑
PIE *gÌ‘Ê°Ă©s‑l‑os lit. ‘a hand full (of corn?)’, l-stem noun of
  PIE *g̑ʰes‑ ‘grip’

Following the example of skmĂ ., the numeric value of this word was adapted to the Ghean hexadecimal system in Middle Lemizh.

doublet of gcrĂ . and xrĂ .

Cognates

Eng kilo- (via Gk Ï‡ÎŻÎ»ÎčÎżÎč ‘thousand’), probably Lat mille (< PIE *sm̄‑gÌ‘Ê°Ă©sl‑os ‘one thousand’)

jĂ sk.

to make/brew beer

jĂČrsk. brewery, brewhouse

Etymology

NLem jeskx‑a
LMLem jùsakx‑yr ‘ship soup’
MLem jees‑akx‑yr, compound of
  MLem jees‑yr ‘thick soup’
OLem jēs‑
PLem *jews‑
PIE *iÌŻĂ©uÌŻh₁s ‘broth, soup’
 —and—
  MLem akx‑yr ‘ship’
Ghe aqx‑ə̄ /aqÏ‡ÉŻË/

jexĂ .

to bake something [e.g. bridecake]-acc from something [e.g. wheat, dough]-dat

Etymology

NLem jexe‑a
LMLem jùxù‑ar ‘baker’
MLem jeexee‑ar ‘farmer’
OLem jēhē‑
PLem *jewhē‑
PIE *iÌŻeuÌŻh₁‑ᾗ‑s ‘possessing cereals’, internal derivation of
  PIE *iÌŻĂ©uÌŻh₁‑os ‘cereal, barley’

Cognates

Lit jãvas ‘cereal plant’

jloĂ .

to make Greek

jloĂ r. the country of Greece

— jloynù droÌne. squabblers, mutual enemies, lit. ‘Greeks and Troyans’

Etymology

NLem jlo‑a
LMLem xellà‑yr
Koi ጙλλᜱ‑ς
Gk ΣΔλλοί ‘inhabitants of northwestern Greece’

jrĂ .

to make worms

Etymology

NLem jUr‑a
LMLem, MLem jUr‑yr
OLem jĂŒr‑
PLem *gjuwer‑ ‘wild beast’, Lindeman’s variant of
PIE *g̑ʰuÌŻĂ©r‑s, root noun of
  PIE *g̑ʰuÌŻer‑ ‘go crookedly’

doublet of qrĂ .

Cognates

Eng feral (via Lat ferus ‘wild’), Ved hvárate ‘diverge, bend, go crookedly’

jrĂ k.

to make roe deer (Capreolus capreolus)

Etymology

NLem jork‑a
LMLem, MLem jork‑yr
OLem jork‑
PLem *jork‑
PIE *iÌŻĂłrk‑os

Cognates

Gk Î¶ÎżÏÎșᜱς ‘roe deer, gazelle’, Wel iwrch ‘roe deer’

jnĂ .

to make every, all, the whole (relative weight 1; see unit 7, Weighting numerals – usually with partitive bracket; see unit 8, Cardinal numerals), the Universe

Usage notes

This word has pejorative connotations when used with certain words (mainly flat things, but also faces), dating from Middle Lemizh:

This list is far from complete.

The meaning ‘Universe’ is probably influenced by the unrelated but similar sounding xnàr. ‘land, (inhabited) world’.

Etymology

irregular development of
NLem can‑a ‘complete, all’
LMLem, MLem can‑yr
OLem shand‑ ‘win’
PLem *sand‑ ‘succeed’, root aorist of
PIE *seh₂dʰ‑

The idiosyncratic development from NLem c to modern j could be a contamination from the neighbouring xpĂ j.. (It also avoids confusion with the near-antonym crĂ ..)

See RĂ bv. for information on Ghean weighting numerals.

Cognates

Gk áŒ°ÎžáżĄÌÏ‚ ‘straight, fair’, Ved sĂ­dhyati ‘succeeds’

jnĂ gc.

to be curious about something-acc/causal-transporting (also dat/causal-receiving, see unit 3, Ambiguous usage)

Etymology

NLem, LMLem, MLem jingj‑a ‘crave’
OLem jinggh‑
PLem *gjinggh‑ ‘pant, crave’, nasal-infix present of
PIE *g̑ʰeiÌŻgʰ‑

Cognates

Ved jĂ©hamāna- ‘panting (with open mouth)’

jnĂ j.

to be bored by something-acc/causal-transporting, also dat/causal-receiving (see unit 3, Ambiguous usage)

Etymology

NLem jenj‑a
LMLem, MLem jenj‑yr
OLem jenj‑ ‘(be) bored’
PLem *gjenj‑ ‘open one’s mouth, yawn’, nasal-infix present of
PIE *g̑ʰeh₁iÌŻâ€‘

Cognates

Eng yawn, Lat hÄ«scƍ ‘yawn, gape’

jmĂ .

to make doors and windows

Etymology

abstracted from jmàs. ‘to make doors’ and jmàxt. ‘to make windows’

jmĂ x.

to make ice, (of water or bodies of water) to freeze

Etymology

gender change of
NLem jem‑a
LMLem jùm‑yr
MLem jeem‑yr
OLem jēm‑
PLem *gjēom‑
PIE *gÌ‘Ê°Ă©iÌŻom‑s ‘winter’

Gender change comes from the fact that ice is a form of water and thus (poetically) male; see also zmÌs. ‘hail’.

Cognates

Lat hiems ‘winter’, Cro zima ‘winter, frost’

jmĂ xt.

to make windows

Etymology

NLem jmunt‑a
LMLem, MLem lingjwont‑yr
OLem lingj‑hwont‑, endocentric compound (tatpurusha) of
  OLem lingj‑ ‘house’ (more at lĂ j.)
 —and—
  OLem hwont‑ ‘eye’
PLem *ohwont‑
PIE *h̄₃kÊ·â€‘Ăłnt‑s, Narten present active participle of
  PIE *h₃ekʷ‑ ‘see’

Cognates

Eng eye, Lat oculus ‘eye’

jmĂ s.

to make doors

Etymology

NLem jmUs‑a
LMLem lingjfÒs‑yr ‘portal, front door’
MLem lingjfOOs‑yr
OLem lingj‑fös‑, endocentric compound (tatpurusha) of
  OLem lingj‑ ‘house’ (more at lĂ j.)
 —and—
  OLem fös‑ ‘mouth’
PLem *fƍs‑
PIE *h₃óh₁s

Cognates

Lat ƍs ‘mouth’, Hit ais ‘mouth’

jmRĂ s.

to make tired, to tire

Etymology

NLem jmRas‑a
LMLem, MLem neRwas‑yr
OLem nighwas‑
PLem *neghwas‑ ‘night’
PIE *nĂ©gʷ‑t‑s, t-stem noun of
  PIE *negʷ‑ ‘grow dark’

Cognates

Eng night, Lat nox ‘night’

jbĂ t.

to vote for someone-dat for some office-acc; for something-dat

jbÙlt. to elect someone-dat for some office-acc

Etymology

NLem jbot‑a
LMLem kibot‑yr ‘voting urn’
Koi ÎșÎčÎČωτ‑áœčς ‘wooden box, chest’, of unknown origin

This word was loaned in error; the Koi term for a voting urn is actually the diminutive ÎșÎčÎČ᜜τÎčÎżÎœ.

Cognates

possibly Lat cibus ‘food’

jvelĂ .

to play chess, a game of chess

jvelÌ. chess piece
jvelĂČr. chess board

Etymology

NLem jvelO‑a
LMLem xwasùlÒ‑yr
MLem xwaseilOU‑yr
OTroy ÏČÌŁÎ±ÏƒÎčλΔυ‑ς /hÊ·aˈse͜ileus/ ‘king, chess’
SHell *qhasileƩ‑s ‘chief, king’, probably of pre-Greek origin

OTroy likely calqued this term from a language spoken in East Asia, where chess originated. Another OTroy term for this (or a similar) game is Ï™Î”Ï„ÏÎżÏÎ”Ï‚ /kedˈvo͜ures/ ‘four’, from the four sections of an army, which the players aim to connect in an optimal way.

Cognates

Gk ÎČασÎčλΔύς ‘chief, king’

jhĂ j.

to make machines

jhÚj. mechanic (also the constellation consisting of Boötes and Corona Borealis; see appendix, Constellations)

Etymology

NLem jhen‑a
LMLem, MLem xuxsen‑yr ‘ox’
OLem xuhsen‑
PLem *xuhsen‑
PIE *h₂uksĂ©n‑s

Cognates

Eng ox, Ved ukáčŁÄÌ ‘young bull’

jsĂ j.

to imprison, jail someone-dat

jsĂČrj. prison, jail

Etymology

NLem jsoj‑a ‘island > jail’
LMLem xafxĂČj‑yr ‘island’
MLem xafxouj‑yr
OLem xaf‑xouj‑ ‘wetland, island’, compound of
  OLem xaf‑ ‘water, stream’
PLem *xaf‑ ‘water’ [animate], ‘stream’
PIE *hâ‚‚Ă©p‑s
 —and—
  OLem xouj‑ ‘pasture’
PLem *xowj‑
PIE *h₂óuÌŻi‑s ‘sheep’

Cognates

Ved ā́p ‘water’; Eng ewe

jstĂ .

to sail a ship-acc somewhere-dat etc.

jstĂč. a sail

Etymology

NLem jsti‑a
LMLem xistì‑yr
Koi áŒ±ÏƒÏ„áœ·â€‘ÎżÎœ, diminutive of
  Koi ጱστ‑áœčς ‘mast’, nominalisation of
  Koi ጔστη‑ΌÎč ‘stand’ [tr.]
SHell *sístā‑mi, i-reduplicated athematic present of
PIE *steh₂‑ ‘stand’

doublet of zdrĂ .

Cognates

Eng histo-logy (via Gk), Eng stand

jfĂ xw.

to do evil to someone-dat

jfùxw. someone doing evil; the Devil (used by adherents of monotheism in this sense; see also igcùd. ‘Lord’)

Etymology

NLem jfOxw‑a
LMLem xyfÒxw‑ar
MLem xyfOOxw‑ar
OLem xyföhw‑
PLem *xafƍhw‑
PIE *hâ‚‚Ă©poh₃kʷ‑os ‘inverted, wicked’

Cognates

Eng awk‑ward; Cro opak ‘wicked, evil’

cĂ .

relative pronoun type I level n−4: see unit 6, Relative pronouns

Etymology

NLem, LMLem, MLem c‑a, formed after the Ghean relative pronouns
a f‑a s‑a sh‑a x‑a / fˇ‑a sˇ‑a shˇ‑a xˇ‑a
/a Éža s̟a ʃa χa / ÎČa z̟a ʒa ʁa/

canxwĂ .

to make dark matter

Etymology

NLem canxw‑a ‘dust’
LMLem, MLem canxw‑yr
OLem zhanxw‑
PLem *dzanxw‑ ‘raise dust’, u-present of
PIE *dʰenh₂‑ ‘slip away’

doublet of cnĂ xw.

Cognates

Gk ÎžÎŹÎœÎ±Ï„ÎżÏ‚ ‘death’, Eng Danube

cĂ wb.

to make hardly any(thing) (relative weight 1⁄8; see unit 7, Weighting numerals – usually with partitive bracket; see unit 8, Cardinal numerals)

Usage notes

The Middle and Old Lemizh sense of ‘negligible, trivial, not worth mentioning’ is still palpable today.

Etymology

NLem cambr‑a
LMLem cambr‑yr
MLem cambr‑yr ‘negligible’
OLem zhambr‑
PLem *dzambr‑ ‘few, little’, r-stem adjective of
PIE *dʰebʰ‑ ‘reduce’

See RĂ bv. for information on Ghean weighting numerals.

Cognates

Ved dabhnóti ‘deceives’, Lv dñbt ‘strike, beat’

cĂ x.

to make/cultivate fields (for growing crops); (board games, especially chess) to make spaces, squares

Etymology

NLem cOx‑a
LMLem cÒx‑yr
MLem cOOxe‑yr, haplology of
OLem zhöxēr‑
PLem *dzƍ‑xār‑ ‘field (for growing crops)’, compound of
  PLem *dzƍ‑ ‘grain, seed’
PIE *dÊ°Ăłh₁n‑eh₂
 —and—
  PLem *xār‑ ‘field, pasture land’
PIE *hâ‚‚Ă©g̑r‑os

Cognates

Eng acre, Lat ager ‘field, land’

cĂ hw.

to make hair, fur

cahwnĂš., cahwcĂšwb. bald

Etymology

NLem cOhw‑a
LMLem cÒ‑ehw‑yr, compound of
  LMLem cÒ‑yr ‘awn’
MLem cOO‑yr
OLem zhö‑
PLem *dzƍ‑ ‘grain, seed’
PIE *dÊ°Ăłh₁n‑eh₂
 —and—
  LMLem, MLem ehw‑yr ‘horse’
OLem heshw‑
PLem *heshw‑
PIE *h₁ék̑uÌŻâ€‘os

Cognates

Lit dĂșona ‘bread’; Lat equus ‘horse’

cOĂ c.

to make human(s), persons, people

Etymology

poststem from singular of
NLem cO‑a
LMLem ecÒ‑yr
MLem ecOO‑yr
OLem hezhö‑ ‘person, individual’, inflected form of
PLem *hezhƍ ‘I’
PIE *h₁egÌ‘Ăłh₂

Cognates

Eng I, Gk áŒÎłáœœ ‘I’

crĂ . [1]

to make few, little, a bit (relative weight 1⁄4; see unit 7, Weighting numerals – usually with partitive bracket; see unit 8, Cardinal numerals)

crURÌjg. vitamin (⇐ ⇔ crÌ RàjgU. ‘a bit for life’)

Etymology

gender change of
NLem crumbw‑a ‘2/6’
LMLem crumbw‑yr, contamination of
MLem srumbw‑yr ‘few, little’
OLem srumbw‑
PLem *tsrumbw‑ ‘of little worth’, u-stem adjective of
PIE *dÊ°reuÌŻbʰ‑ ‘break’ [intr.], crumble’
 —with—
MLem cambr‑yr ‘negligible’
OLem zhambr‑
PLem *dzambr‑ ‘few, little’, r-stem adjective of
PIE *dʰebʰ‑ ‘reduce’

See RĂ bv. for information on Ghean weighting numerals.

Cognates

Gk Ξρύπτω ‘crush, grind’

crĂ . [2]

Usage notes

Occurs only in the compound vmyjcrÌ. ‘death cap’, lit. ‘underworldly agaric’. Often misinterpreted as ‘a bit of an agaric’ or ‘an agaric not doing much’, which is seen as rather cynical. As an independent word, it is last attested in LMLem as cUrer ‘underworld’ and cUryr ‘underworldly’.

Etymology

NLem cUr‑a ‘underworldly’
LMLem, MLem cUr‑yr
OLem zhĂŒr‑ ‘underworld’
PLem *dzuwr‑ ‘deep’, r-stem adjective of
PIE *dÊ°euÌŻb‑

Cognates

Eng deep, TochB taupe ‘mine’ (as in mining)

crĂ w.

to make laws

Etymology

NLem carw‑a
LMLem, MLem carw‑yr
OLem zharw‑
PLem *dzarw‑ ‘announcement, order’, nominalisation, o-stem adjective of
PIE *dÊ°reuÌŻâ€‘ ‘cry, announce’

Cognates

Gk ÎžÏáœłÎżÎŒÎ±Îč ‘cry, shriek’, Arm erdnowm ‘swear, take an oath’

cnĂ .

to make children (human or other living beings before puberty) of a parent-nom

Usage notes

This word is not used to express ‘someone’s child (son or daughter)’ unless to specifically refer to a child before puberty; see psràb. ‘father’ and mesà. ‘give birth’.

Etymology

gender change of
NLem cUnw‑a
LMLem, MLem cUnw‑yr
OLem shĂŒnw‑ ‘(young) child’
PLem *sĆ«nw‑ ‘son’
PIE *suh₁nĂș‑s

Gender change possibly occurred for similarity with crà. ‘little’.

Cognates

Eng son, OCS synƭ ‘son’

cnĂ dj.

to make spicy (hot, stinging), to give a hot, stinging taste to something-dat

Etymology

NLem candz‑a
LMLem candz‑ar
MLem candz‑ar ‘cutting, injuring > spicy, hot’
OLem shandz‑ ‘cut, injure’
PLem *sandz‑ ‘cut’, root present of
PIE *snedʰ‑

Cognates

Wel naddu ‘hew, chip’; unrelated to Eng snide and Ger schneiden ‘cut’

cnĂ k.

self-transporting: to (actively) swim somewhere-dat etc.

Usage notes

In Old Lemizh, this verb apparently could also mean ‘drown’; and there is a classical if gruesome story about a man drowning after his lower legs were bitten off by a large fish. From Middle Lemizh onwards, swimming is mosty positively connoted, as seen in metaphors where it means ‘escape, get out of harm’s way’.

Etymology

NLem, LMLem, MLem cank‑a
OLem shank‑ ‘swim through’
PLem *sanx‑ ‘swim, bathe’, root present of
PIE *sneh₂‑

Cognates

Eng navy (via Lat nāvis ‘ship’)

cnĂ zd.

to make feathers;
to write or draw something (e.g. a letter, a sketch)-fact about something-acc to someone-dat with a pen or quill (the fact object also needs an inner fact; see unit 14, Objects related to language and the last exercise there)

cnĂčzd. pen, quill (see usage notes)

Usage notes

The two meanings have quite different plot usages: thus, cnÌzd. (inner acc) can mean ‘something about which is written with a pen or [in historical contexts] a quill’ but in most cases means ‘birds’ feathers’. The inner fact cnĂ zd. mostly refers to writing or drawing with a pen or quill as opposed to making feathers, while cnĂčzd. (inner ins) most often means ‘pen, quill’, not ‘an instrument for making feathers’.

Etymology

NLem cOnzd‑a
LMLem cÒ‑nezd‑yr, compound of
  LMLem cÒ‑yr ‘awn’
MLem cOO‑yr
OLem zhö‑
PLem *dzƍ‑ ‘grain, seed’
PIE *dÊ°Ăłh₁n‑eh₂
 —and—
  LMLem, MLem nezd‑yr ‘bird’
OLem nizd‑ ‘nest’
PLem *nizd‑
PIE *nisd‑ós

Cognates

Lit dĂșona ‘bread’; Eng nest

cnĂ xw.

to make dust

Etymology

NLem canxw‑a
LMLem, MLem canxw‑yr
OLem zhanxw‑
PLem *dzanxw‑ ‘raise dust’, u-present of
PIE *dʰenh₂‑ ‘slip away’

doublet of canxwĂ .

Cognates

Gk ÎžÎŹÎœÎ±Ï„ÎżÏ‚ ‘death’, Eng Danube

cmĂ bv.

to hurt someone-dat

Usage notes

In Modern Lemizh, this verb is also used to express hurting someone verbally and colloquially often just means ‘annoy, get on someone’s nerves’.

To express infliction of general harm, not necessarily bodily or verbally, use wRĂ ..

Etymology

NLem, LMLem, MLem cambw‑a
OLem zhambw‑
PLem *dzambw‑ ‘hit, smash (?)’, root present of
PIE *dʰembʰ‑

Cognates

Ved dambháyati ‘smashes, destroys’

cmĂ k.

to work with one’s hands, to do something-fact with one’s hands

cmĂčk. hand

Etymology

NLem camk‑a
LMLem, MLem camk‑yr
OLem shamk‑
PLem *samx‑ ‘scoop up’, root present of
PIE *semh₂‑

doublet of qmĂ xz.

Cognates

Lit semiĂč ‘scoop’

cgĂ c.

to make hedgehogs

Usage notes

As in many cultures, the hedgehog is the proverbial non-agressive but well-defended animal. Phrases along the lines of là cgÌcem. ‘withdraw defensively (and anyone trying to get through the defenses is doing so at their own risk)’, lit. ‘behave like a hedgehog’, have been attested since Old Lemizh.

Etymology

simplification of
NLem cgjir‑a
LMLem, MLem hUgjir‑yr
OLem shĂŒgjir‑
PLem *sƫ‑gjer‑, clarifying compound of
  PLem *sƫ‑ ‘pig’
PIE *sĂșh₂‑s
 —and—
  PLem *gjer‑ ‘hedgehog’
PIE *gÌ‘Ê°Ă©r‑s

Expected would be ModLem **cgcĂ c., which has lost one of its cs for obvious reasons.

Cognates

Eng sow; Gk Ï‡ÎźÏ ‘hedgehog’

zĂ .

relative pronoun type I level n−3: see unit 6, Relative pronouns

Etymology

NLem, LMLem, MLem z‑a, formed after the Ghean relative pronouns
a f‑a s‑a sh‑a x‑a / fˇ‑a sˇ‑a shˇ‑a xˇ‑a
/a Éža s̟a ʃa χa / ÎČa z̟a ʒa ʁa/

zaraqĂ ht.

to make Zarathustra (an ancient philosopher and poet)

Etymology

NLem zaraquhtr‑a, academic loan of
OLem zarathushtr‑, from an Asian language

Cognates

To judge from context, Av ZaraΞuƥtra seems to be related.

zrOnĂ .

to make mermaids (also a constellation in the region of Cassiopaia, Camelopardalis and Lynx; see appendix, Constellations)

zrOnyÌx. merman (also the constellations Aquarius and Equuleus)

Etymology

NLem zrOn‑a
LMLem serùn‑yr
Koi ΣΔÎčρ᜔Μ ‘Siren’, agentive noun of
  Koi σΔÎčρ‑ᜱ ‘cord, rope’, nominalisation of
  Koi Δጎρ‑ω ‘link, bind together’
SHell *hĂ©ry‑ƍ, full-grade iÌŻe-present of
PIE *ser‑

doublet of srĂ j. and srĂ c.

Cognates

Eng Siren, Lat serƍ ‘link, bind together’

znĂ g.

to deform something-dat into some shape-acc [e.g. flat, into a z]

Etymology

NLem, LMLem, MLem zing‑a, probably dialect borrowing of
OLem dhing‑
PLem *dzing‑ ‘knead, form’, root present of
PIE *dÊ°eiÌŻg̑ʰ‑

Cognates

Eng dough, Lat fingƍ ‘to form’

zmĂ .

to look after someone-dat, to care for someone-dat

zmĂš. caretaker, sitter, forming compounds such as:

zmilùj. housesitter (⇐ ⇔ zmà lÌji. ‘look after a house’)
zmicnĂš. babysitter for children
zmixmĂšs. babysitter for babies
etc.

Usage notes

Compounds such as the ones above (with an epenthetic dative) typically denote taking care of someone or something for some length of time and for some compensation such as money.

A dated folk etymology views this verb as the female (i.e. zero–poststem) form of zmàxt. ‘to guide’ and has, in extreme cases, interpreted it as a softer or weaker variant of the latter. Don’t pun on the similarity of these two words unless you want to get really unpopular.

Etymology

NLem zOm‑a
LMLem suzÒmyn‑ar ‘benefactor’
MLem suzOOmyn‑ar
OLem hsuzömyn‑ ‘good gift’ [either referring to an area of land or to a good person]
PLem *hsuzƍman‑
PIE *h₁su‑dĂ©h₃mnÌ„ ‘good gift’, compound of
  PIE *h₁su‑ ‘good-’, metathesis, prefix form of
  PIE *h₁uÌŻes‑ ‘good’
 —and—
  PIE *dĂ©h₃‑mnÌ„ ‘gift’, neuter abstract -mnÌ„-noun of
  PIE *deh₃‑ ‘give’

Cognates

Gk Δᜐ‑ ‘good‑’; Lat dƍ ‘give’

zmĂ j.

to make stones

Etymology

NLem zmyn‑a
LMLem, MLem slicman‑yr ‘boundary stone’
OLem slizhman‑
PLem *slezhman‑ ‘ending, limit’
PIE *slĂ©g̑‑mnÌ„, neuter abstract -mnÌ„-noun of
  PIE *sleg̑‑ ‘end’

doublet of hlĂ g.

Cognates

Gk Î»ÎźÎłÏ‰ ‘leave off, cease’

zmĂ w.

to make nightshade fruits (tubers in case of the potato and leaves in case of tobacco)

zmĂšw. nightshade plant
zmÌw. nightshade fruit/tuber/leave

zmymwgrosà. to make Cape gooseberries, goldenberries (⇐ ⇔ zmÌw grosÌym. ‘nightshade fruit like cherries’)
zmymwxalĂ . to make tomatoes
zmymwfisĂ . to make aubergines, eggplant fruit
zmywràjd. to make bittersweet nightshade berries (⇐ ⇔ zmÌw rÌjdy. ‘red nightshade fruit’)
zmywmlĂ v. to make sweet peppers, bell peppers
zmywkĂ xw. to make potatoes
zmywpĂ bc. to make belladonna berries, deadly nightshade berries
zmywcnĂ dj. to make chili peppers
zmywwĂ cg. to make black nightshade berries
zmywskràj. to make thorn apples, devil’s trumpet fruit (⇐ ⇔ zmÌw skrùjy. ‘stinging nightshade fruit’)
zmUwqentà. to make tobacco leaves (⇐ ⇔ zmÌw qentìU. ‘nightshade leaves for the tobacco smoker’)
(all with inner nom for the plant and inner acc for the fruit, tuber or leave)

Usage notes

Having formerly been known only for their poison, nightshades have become increasingly popular for their non-toxic fruit (and tubers) since NLem times. There is a plethora of rumours about them: eat them raw to increase your strength and speed; always eat them slowly; only eat them cooked; imagine eating the plant instead of the fruit; etc. None of this nonsense, however, has managed to spoil the Lemizh’s appetite for nightshades.

Etymology

NLem zmingw‑a
LMLem frenk‑vengw‑yr ‘fire-fruit (toxic fruit, bittersweet nightshade?)’, compound of
  LMLem, MLem frenk‑a ‘fruit’
OLem frenk‑
PLem *pfrenk‑, Narten present of
PIE *bʰrenk‑ ‘swell’
 —and—
  LMLem, MLem vengw‑yr ‘fire’
OLem dhengw‑ ‘make fire’
PLem *dzengw‑ ‘burn’ [tr.], Narten present of
PIE *dʰegʷʰ‑

Cognates

ON bringa ‘breast, chest’; Lat foveƍ ‘(keep) warm, foster’

zmĂ xt.

to guide someone-dat in something-acc

Usage notes

zmĂčrxt., lit. ‘point crossed in guiding’, metaphorically refers to a point of no return (outside of time and causality, so to speak), which you pass when your guide leads you into forbidden territory. (This is related to the concept of the White Stag; see appendix, Constellation Stag)

See also zmĂ ..

Etymology

NLem zOmxt‑a
LMLem zÒmuxt‑a
MLem zOOmuxt‑a
OLem zömuxt‑, from the name of a mythological dwarf who gave guidance to the Prince in some versions of the Rosebush legend, and acted as a counsellor of the Wise One in others

zmĂ s.

to hail (send hailstones) somewhere-dat etc.

zmĂšs. hail cloud
zmÌs. the hail

zmysrÌ. hailstone

Etymology

gender change of
NLem zmi‑a
LMLem semù‑yr ‘point’
Koi ÏƒÎ·ÎŒÎ”áż–â€‘ÎżÎœ ‘sign, proof, point’
  Koi Ïƒáż†ÎŒÎ± ‘sign’
SHell *thyā́mn̄
PIE *dÊ°iÌŻĂ©h₂‑mnÌ„, neuter abstract -mnÌ„-noun of
  PIE *dÊ°iÌŻeh₂‑ ‘notice’

Gender change comes from the fact that hail is a form of water and thus (poetically) male; see also jmÌx. ‘ice’.

doublet of djemĂ . and smĂ .

Cognates

Eng semantic (via Gk), Ved dhyāyati ‘think of, imagine’

zmĂ sk.

to make sharks (also the constellation in the region of Phoenix and Tucana; see appendix, Constellations)

Etymology

NLem zmisk‑a
LMLem fxurmpùsk‑yr ‘(white?) shark’
MLem fxurmpeesk‑yr
OLem fxurm‑pēsk‑, compound of
  OLem fxurm‑ ‘dragon’
PLem *fxurm‑, of unknown origin; related to PIE *uÌŻr̄́mi‑s ‘worm’?
 —and—
  OLem pēsk‑ ‘fish’
PLem *pēsk‑
PIE *pĂ©iÌŻsk̑‑os

Cognates

Eng fish

zgwĂ j.

to make boats

Etymology

NLem zgwal‑a
LMLem, MLem sgwal‑yr
OLem sgwal‑
PLem *sgwal‑
PIE *skÊ·ĂĄl‑os ‘a large fish’

Cognates

Eng whale, Lat squalus ‘shark’

zdĂ s.

self-transporting: to sit down, perfect: to sit somewhere-dat etc.;
acc, perfect: to float, to be afloat in water etc.-nom (or agentive caus)

zdĂČrs. a seat

zdasgwĂŹlt. to be capable of floating

Etymology

poststem from perfect of
NLem, LMLem, MLem zd‑a
OLem zd‑ ‘sit’
PLem *zd‑, root aorist of
PIE *sed‑ ‘sit down’

The secondary meaning ‘float’ was generalised from the earlier development of nenà. ‘run’ > also ‘float quickly’.

Cognates

Eng sit, Lat sedeƍ ‘sit’

zdrĂ .

to write or draw something (e.g. a letter, a sketch)-fact about something-acc to someone-dat with a pencil (the fact object also needs an inner fact; see unit 14, Objects related to language and the last exercise there)

zdrĂč. pencil

Etymology

NLem zdor‑a ‘silverpoint, leadpoint’
LMLem zdĂČr‑yr ‘stylus’
MLem zdour‑yr ‘pin, stylus’
OTroy ÏƒÏ„Î±Ï…Ïâ€‘ÎżÏ‚ /ˈsdauros/
SHell *staur‑ós ‘stake, pole’
PIE *sth̄₂‑ur‑ós, r-stem noun of
  PIE *steh₂‑ ‘stand’

doublet of jstĂ .

Cognates

Eng histo-logy (via Gk), Eng stand

zdnĂ k.

to make lice

Etymology

NLem zgank‑a
LMLem, MLem zgdank‑yr ‘bug, vermin’
OLem zgdank‑
PLem *zgdanx‑ ‘scatter’, nasal-infix present of
PIE *skedh₂‑ ‘splinter, scatter’

This word replaced le‑a – cognate with Eng louse – as the word for lice during a prolonged epidemic in NLem times.

doublet of skĂ qk.

Cognates

Gk σÎșÎŻÎŽÎœÎ·ÎŒÎč ‘disperse’, Lit kedĂč ‘burst’

zvĂ .

to do science in some field-acc; a science

normally used in compounds, e.g.
zvyRĂ jg. (to do) biology
zvyxnĂ . (to do) geography
zvyqrĂ . (to do) zoology
zvyfmĂ xt. (to do) botany
(all with inner fact for the sciences and nom for the scientists)

Etymology

unclear back formation of
  ModLem zvormĂ v.
NLem zvor‑mev‑a ‘science’ (See there for more information.)

Cognates

Eng sister

zvĂ c.

to be friends with someone-dat; friendship

zvĂšc.(, zvĂŹc.) friend

Usage notes

Calling someone a friend is not to be taken lightly. Someone you just correspond with via a social platform isn’t a friend.

Etymology

NLem zvor‑a
LMLem, MLem swisor‑yr ‘sibling’
OLem swisor‑
PLem *swesor‑ ‘sister’
PIE *suÌŻĂ©sor‑s

Cognates

Eng sister, Lat soror ‘sister’

zvormĂ v.

to do science, to work as a scientist on something-acc; science

Etymology

NLem zvor‑mev‑a, compound of
  NLem zvor‑a ‘friend’
LMLem, MLem swisor‑yr ‘sibling’
OLem swisor‑
PLem *swesor‑ ‘sister’
PIE *suÌŻĂ©sor‑s
 —and—
  NLem mev‑a ‘wise’
LMLem, MLem mev‑yr
OLem medh‑ ‘measure, look after, enforce’
PLem *medh‑, Narten present of
PIE *med‑

This is a NLem learned calque from Koi φÎčÎ»ÎżÏƒÎżÏ†áœ·áŸ± ‘philosophy, science’, lit. ‘love of wisdom’.

See also zvĂ ..

Cognates

Eng sister; Ger messen ‘measure’ (but not Eng measure)

zwlĂ c.

to make sulfur (symbol: Θ)

Etymology

NLem zwlor‑a
LMLem, MLem swilor‑yr
OLem swilor‑
PLem *swelor‑ ‘sulfur flame, burning sulfur?’
PIE *suÌŻĂ©l‑or‑s, r-stem noun of
  PIE *suÌŻel‑ ‘smoulder, burn’

Cognates

Ger schwelen ‘smoulder’, Lit svelĂč ‘smoulder, glow’

vĂ .

relative pronoun type I level n−2: see unit 6, Relative pronouns

Etymology

NLem, LMLem, MLem v‑a, formed after the Ghean relative pronouns
a f‑a s‑a sh‑a x‑a / fˇ‑a sˇ‑a shˇ‑a xˇ‑a
/a Éža s̟a ʃa χa / ÎČa z̟a ʒa ʁa/

vĂ bv.

to be interested in something-acc/causal-transporting, also dat/causal-receiving (see unit 3, Ambiguous usage)

Etymology

NLem vibwr‑a ‘fascinate’
LMLem vìbwyr‑a
MLem viibwyr‑a
OLem dhībwyr‑
PLem *dzī‑bwar‑ ‘be fascinated’, compound of
  PLem *dzī‑ ‘set one’s eyes on’, root present of
PIE *dÊ°eiÌŻh₁‑
 —and—
  PLem *bwar‑ ‘shiny, glossy’, r-stem adjective of
PIE *bʰeh₂‑ ‘shine’

Cognates

Alb di ‘know’; Gk φα᜷Μω ‘show, bring to light’

vĂ sk.

to err in something-dat (the action or thing made wrong) or -acc (the wrong action or thing);
an error, mistake

Etymology

NLem, LMLem, MLem vesk‑a
OLem dhesk‑ ‘misplace > err’
PLem *dzesk‑ ‘put’, sk̑-present of
PIE *dʰeh₁‑ ‘put, make’

Cognates

Eng do, and funnily thesis (via Gk ΞέσÎčς ‘placement, arrangement’) and Lat crē‑dƍ ‘trust, believe’

vĂ q.

to choose something-acc/dat

Etymology

gender change of
NLem vi‑a
LMLem vì‑a
MLem vii‑a
OLem dhī‑
PLem *dzī‑ ‘set one’s eyes on’, root present of
PIE *dÊ°eiÌŻh₁‑

Cognates

Alb di ‘know’

vrĂ .

to bind, tie something/someone-acc with something-ins to something-dat

Etymology

NLem, LMLem, MLem ver‑a
OLem dher‑ ‘balk, stall, hinder’
PLem *dzer‑ ‘fasten, fix’, Narten present of
PIE *dʰer‑

Cognates

Ved dhāráyati ‘hold, support’

vnĂ .

to burn (of fire);
agentive caus: to set fire to something-dat, to burn something-dat to something-acc [e.g. ashes];
dat: to burn (of an object)

vnĂš. a/the fire
vnÌ. smoke and ashes
vnĂŹ. fuel
vnĂČr. fireplace, hearth

vnajnà. agentive caus: to burn down something-dat (as opposed to ‘set fire to’)

Usage notes

Fire is mythologically and poetically seen as female, which is the source of the ‘female’ (zero) poststem in Modern Lemizh. George Lakoff did not comment on this fact. (xÌf. ‘water’, by comparison, is male, as for some reason is sxnùz. ‘Sun’.)

Etymology

gender change of
NLem vengw‑a
LMLem, MLem vengw‑yr ‘fire’
OLem dhengw‑ ‘make fire’
PLem *dzengw‑ ‘burn’ [tr.], Narten present of
PIE *dʰegʷʰ‑

The Old Lemizh meaning ‘make fire’ gave rise to the inner accusative of MLem vengw‑yr ‘fire’. The modern plot, by contrast, views the fire-nom as burning an object-dat, in analogy to someone breaking a branch, the Sun melting snow, etc.

Cognates

Lat foveƍ ‘(keep) warm, foster’, Ved dáhati ‘burns’ [tr.]

vnĂ t.

to chew something-dat into something-acc [e.g. mush]

vnĂčt. molar (tooth)

vnatmlĂš. ruminant

Etymology

NLem vont‑a
LMLem, MLem vont‑yr ‘tooth’
OLem dhont‑
PLem *edhont‑
PIE *h̄₁d‑ónt‑s, Narten present active participle of
  PIE *h₁ed‑ ‘eat’

doublet of Ă v., Ă vd. and Ă qt.

Cognates

Eng tooth, Lat dēns ‘tooth’

vmĂ j.

to make agarics (lamelled mushrooms)

vmyjkrÌgw. fly agaric
vmyjcrÌ. death cap

Etymology

NLem vmin‑a
LMLem, MLem swylmen‑yr ‘mushroom’
OLem swylhmen‑
PLem *swalhmen‑ ‘swelling’
PIE *suÌŻlÌ„h₁‑mh̄₁n‑ós ‘swollen’, root present mediopassive participle of
  PIE *suÌŻelh₁‑ ‘swell’

Cognates

Eng swell, possibly Lat īn‑solēns ‘haughty’

vmlĂ v.

to make bears (also the constellation Ursa Major; see appendix, Constellations)

Etymology

NLem vmlev‑a
LMLem, MLem milivev‑yr
OLem milidhhedh‑
PLem *melidh‑hedh‑, compound of
  PLem *melidh‑ ‘honey’
PIE *mélid
 —and—
  PLem *hedh‑ ‘eat’, Narten present of
PIE *h₁ed‑

The bear is named ‘honey-eater’ as in other Eastern European branches of Indo-European.

Cognates

Lat mel ‘honey’; Eng eat

vxĂ zd.

to make/build hotels

Etymology

NLem vxozd‑a
LMLem voxozd‑yr
MLem voxozdi‑yr ‘hotel, inn’
OTroy ÎŽÎżâ€‘Ï‡ÎżÏƒÏ„Îč‑ς /Ă°Ìžoˈxosdis/, endocentric compound (tatpurusha) of
  OTroy ÎŽÎż /Ă°Ìžo/ ‘house’
SHell *dĂ”
PIE *dómh₂‑s, root noun of
  PIE *demh₂‑ ‘build’
 —and—
  OTroy Ï‡ÎżÏƒÏ„Îč‑ς /ˈxosdis/ ‘stranger, foreigner’
SHell *khósti‑s
PIE *gÊ°Ăłsth₂i‑s

The OTroy word is a calque from OCh.

Cognates

Eng dome (via Lat domus ‘house’); Eng host, guest (via Lat hospes ‘host, guest’)

wĂ .

relative pronoun type I level n−1: see unit 6, Relative pronouns

Etymology

NLem, LMLem, MLem w‑a, formed after the Ghean relative pronouns
a f‑a s‑a sh‑a x‑a / fˇ‑a sˇ‑a shˇ‑a xˇ‑a
/a Éža s̟a ʃa χa / ÎČa z̟a ʒa ʁa/

wĂ gw.

to make dogs

Usage notes

Dogs are, of course, famous for wagging their tails.

Etymology

NLem wagw‑a
LMLem, MLem wagw‑yr, dialect borrowing of
OLem walgw‑
PLem *walgw‑
PIE *uÌŻl̄́kʷ‑os ‘wolf’

Cognates

Eng wolf, Gk λύÎșÎżÏ‚ ‘wolf’

wĂ b.

to make/weave nets

Etymology

NLem wib‑a
LMLem wìb‑yr
MLem wiib‑yr
OLem wīb‑ ‘weave a net; net’
PLem *wiwb‑, i-reduplicated athematic present of
PIE *uÌŻebʰ‑ ‘weave, wrap around’

doublet of mĂ px. and wmĂ b.

Cognates

Eng weave and web, Gk áœ‘Ï†Î±ÎŻÎœÏ‰ ‘weave’

wĂ tx.

to make books

Etymology

NLem weth‑a ‘scroll’
LMLem, MLem aweth‑yr
Ghe afËĄetsh‑ə̄ /aÎČɛtÊƒÉŻË/

This word, originally meaning ‘scroll’, now refers to books of all shapes, and especially the modern form consisting of bound pages. The older term for ‘book’, NLem blU‑a (< Koi ÎČÎčÎČÎ»áœ·â€‘ÎżÎœ) has fallen out of use after acquiring pejorative connotations along the lines of ‘old, yellowing, smelly tome’. (Also, blU‑a was homonymic with the word for Africa.)

wĂ cg.

to make black, to blacken (‘active’ black, as in black fur or varnish; compare lilbvnà.)

wycgnÌs. astatine (symbol: Μλ)

Etymology

NLem wargr‑a
LMLem, MLem wargr‑yr
OLem wargr‑
PLem *bwargr‑ ‘dark, black’, r-stem adjective of
PIE *bʰerg̑‑ ‘roast’

Most basic colour terms in Lemizh are r-stem Caland adjectives, perhaps motivated by the word for ‘red’.

Cognates

Ved bhrÌ„jjĂĄti ‘roasts’, Lat fer(c)tum ‘a sacrificial cake’

wĂ cz.

to make rice

Etymology

NLem warzn‑a
LMLem warndz‑yr
MLem warndzi‑yr
OLem warndzi‑
PWald *várnji‑s, probably from Austroasiatic

Cognates

Eng rice, Ved vrīhi ‘rice’

wĂ v.

to decide something-acc

Etymology

NLem wevm‑a ‘disassemble, separate > decide’
LMLem wùvmyn‑a ‘disembowel’
MLem weevmyn‑a
OLem wēdhmyn‑
PLem *bwēdhman‑ ‘one who takes something apart?’
PIE *bÊ°Ă©iÌŻd‑mnÌ„ ‘thing split’, neuter abstract -mnÌ„-noun of
  PIE *bÊ°eiÌŻd‑ ‘split’

doublet of wnĂ d.

Cognates

Eng bite, fissure (via Lat findƍ ‘split’)

wĂ wb.

to create, invent something-acc from something-dat

Etymology

NLem, LMLem, MLem wimbr‑a
OLem wimbr‑
PLem *bwimbr‑ ‘give birth’, i-reduplicated athematic present of
PIE *bʰer‑ ‘carry, bear’

doublet of bermĂ .

Cognates

Eng bear ‘carry’, Gk φέρω ‘carry, bear, bring’

wĂ x.

to speak/talk to someone-dat about something-acc; to say something-acc to someone-dat; to tell someone-dat (a story etc.-fact) about something-acc (see unit 14, ‘about’)
(all: in some language-ins)
;
the parole

wĂčx. language

wixfĂčw. telephone (⇐ ⇔ wĂ x fÌwi. ‘talk to someone far away’)

Etymology

NLem wix‑a
LMLem wìx‑a
MLem wiix‑a ‘say’
OLem wīh‑
PLem *wiwh‑, i-reduplicated athematic present of
PIE *uÌŻekʷ‑

Cognates

Ved vĂ­vakti ‘speak’, Gk Î”áŒ¶Ï€ÎżÎœ ‘said, spoke’

wĂ xp.

to act stubbornly

Etymology

NLem wUxp‑a
LMLem wUxp‑yr
MLem wU‑xp‑yr, clarifying compound of
  MLem wU‑yr
OLem wĂŒâ€‘
PLem *bwƫ‑ ‘insistent, (head)strong?’
PIE *bÊ°Ășg̑‑s ‘buck, he-goat’
 —and—
  MLem xp‑yr ‘5/6’
Ghe xp‑ə̄ /χpɯː/

Cognates

Eng buck, Ir boc ‘buck’

wĂ hs.

to make meteors, shooting stars, falling stars; meteors-acc fall

Etymology

NLem wehs‑a
LMLem wùhs‑yr
MLem weehs‑yr
OLem wēshs‑
PLem *wēshs‑
PIE *uÌŻĂ©iÌŻk̑s‑eh₂ ‘mistletoe’

It was believed in ancient times that shooting stars were the seeds of mistletoe.

doublet of gwĂ h.

Cognates

Ger Weichsel ‘sour cherry’, Lat viscum ‘mistletoe’

wĂ sp.

to make/bake bread

Etymology

NLem wesp‑a
LMLem wùdap‑yr
MLem weedap‑yr
OLem wē‑dap‑, compound of
  OLem wē‑ ‘heat, scorch’
PLem *bwē‑ ‘warm’, Narten present of
PIE *bʰeh₁‑
 —and—
  OLem dap‑ ‘flour’
PLem *daf‑ ‘split up’, root present of
PIE *deh₂p‑

Cognates

Ger bĂ€hen ‘toast, roast’; Gk Ύᜱπτω ‘devour’

wĂ f.

to miss someone-acc

Etymology

gender change of
NLem we‑a
LMLem wù‑a
MLem wee‑a ‘grieve, be miserable’, verbalisation of
OLem wē ‘woe!’
PLem *wā
PIE *uÌŻaiÌŻ

Cognates

Eng woe, Lat vae! ‘woe!’

weRĂ .

to make hazelnuts

weRĂš. hazel (tree, shrub)
weRÌ. hazelnut

Etymology

NLem weR‑a
LMLem wùR‑yr
MLem weeR‑yr ‘a nut tree’
OLem wēgh‑
PLem *bwāɩ‑ ‘beech’
PIE *bÊ°eh₂g‑ós

Cognates

Eng book, Gk Ï†Î·ÎłÏŒÏ‚ ‘oak’

weRdĂ .

to make branches

Usage notes

At least since Late Middle Lemizh, poets have used this word for singing of green, richly leaved branches and the music the wind elicits from them.

Etymology

NLem weRdo‑a
LMLem wĂšRdĂČ‑yr
MLem weeRdou‑yr
OLem wēgh‑dou‑, compound of
  OLem wēgh‑ ‘a nut tree’
PLem *bwāɩ‑ ‘beech’
PIE *bÊ°eh₂g‑ós
 —and—
  OLem dou‑ ‘arm’
PLem *dow‑
PIE *dĂłuÌŻâ€‘s

Cognates

Eng book, Gk Ï†Î·ÎłÏŒÏ‚ ‘oak’; Ved dĂłs ‘arm’

wemĂ .

to make/build dams

Usage notes

This verb has been used since Early New Lemizh to express ‘putting obstacles in someone’s way’; with an inner accusative, the word can mean ‘obstacle, hurdle’.

Etymology

gender change of
NLem wemabwr‑a
LMLem, MLem wembrw‑yr
OLem wembrw‑
PLem *bwembrw‑
PIE *bÊ°Ă©bÊ°ru‑s ‘beaver’, reduplicated noun of
  PIE *bÊ°reuÌŻâ€‘ ‘brown’

Gender change was motivated by the myth that only female beavers build dams.

Cognates

Eng beaver, brown

wlĂ g.

to make / put forth blossoms, to blossom

Etymology

NLem, LMLem, MLem walg‑a
OLem walg‑
PLem *bwalg‑ ‘shine, gleam’, root present of
PIE *bʰleg‑

Cognates

Lat fulgƍ ‘shine, sparkle, glitter’, Ger blecken ‘bare [one’s teeth]’

wlĂ gc.

self-transporting: to swell

Etymology

NLem, LMLem, MLem welgj‑a
OLem welgj‑
PLem *bwelgj‑, Narten present of
PIE *bʰelg̑ʰ‑

Cognates

Eng belly, Lit bal̃nas ‘saddle’

wlĂ t.

dat: to guard something-nom; to watch over someone-nom

Etymology

NLem wlot‑a ‘guard, record’
LMLem, MLem fulat‑a ‘watch, guard’
OTroy φυλαττ‑αÎč /fuˈlatai/
SHell *phulátt‑ƍ, of unknown origin

doublet of wlotĂ .

Cognates

Eng pro‑phylaxis (via Gk φύλαΟÎčς ‘act of watching, guarding’)

wlotĂ .

to make/shoot films, movies, videos about something-acc; to film something-acc

wlotĂč. film camera

Usage notes

To say ‘We made a film about J. R. R. Tolkien-acc’ as opposed to ‘We filmed J. R. R. Tolkien-acc’, use a more abstract accusative object, as in ‘We made a film about = We filmed Tolkien’s life’.

Etymology

NLem wlot‑a ‘guard, record’
LMLem, MLem fulat‑a ‘watch, guard’
OTroy φυλαττ‑αÎč /fuˈlatai/
SHell *phulátt‑ƍ, of unknown origin

doublet of wlĂ t.

Cognates

Eng pro‑phylaxis (via Gk φύλαΟÎčς ‘act of watching, guarding’)

wRĂ .

to harm someone-dat

wRiplOqkĂčj. antibacterial, antibiotic (⇐ ⇔ wRĂ  plOqkĂšji. ‘harm bacteria’)

Usage notes

For harm specifically inflicted on the body or with words, use cmàbv. ‘hurt’.

Etymology

NLem, LMLem, MLem woR‑a
OLem wogh‑
PLem *bwoɩ‑ ‘roast, fry’, root present of
PIE *bʰeh₃g‑

Cognates

Eng bake, Gk Ï†ÏŽÎłÏ‰ ‘roast’

wrĂ .

to carry, bear something-acc to someone / somewhere-dat etc.

Etymology

NLem, LMLem, MLem wer‑a
OLem wer‑
PLem *bwer‑, Narten present of
PIE *bʰer‑

Cognates

Eng bear (carry), Lat ferƍ ‘carry, bear’

wrĂ gc.

self-transporting: to climb somewhere-dat etc.

Etymology

NLem, LMLem, MLem wergj‑a
OLem wergj‑
PLem *bwergj‑ ‘rise’, Narten present of
PIE *bʰerg̑ʰ‑

possible doublet of prĂ g.

Cognates

Ved barhayā sám ‘I want to stregthen’; Ger Burg ‘castle, stronghold’

wrĂ dj.

to make chins

Etymology

NLem wardz‑a ‘beard’
LMLem, MLem wardz‑yr
OLem wardz‑
PLem *bwardz‑
PIE *bÊ°ĂĄrdʰ‑os

From Old Lemizh onwards, this word described a bristly, untidy beard, then an unshaven chin, whence the modern meaning.

Cognates

Eng beard, Lat barba ‘beard’

wrĂ ks.

self-receiving, mainly dat: to start waiting, perfect: to wait

Etymology

NLem warks‑a
LMLem, MLem warkt‑a
OLem warkt‑
PLem *warks‑ ‘look out, watch (for a sign)’, s-desiderative of
PIE *uÌŻreg‑ ‘follow (a trace)’

Cognates

Eng urge (via Lat urgeƍ ‘press, urge’), Ice rekja ‘follow, trace’

wrĂ t.

to make/speak words

wrytplÌk. password (⇐ ⇔ wrÌt plĂčky. ‘a word, a means for unlocking’)

Etymology

NLem wert‑a
LMLem, MLem wert‑yr
OLem werht‑
PLem *werht‑
PIE *uÌŻĂ©rh₁‑dÊ°h₁‑om, nominalisation of
  PIE *uÌŻerh₁‑ ‘say’

Cognates

Eng word

wrĂ j.

to dare (to do) something-acc

Etymology

NLem wron‑a
LMLem, MLem furon‑yr ‘daring’
OLem furon‑
PLem *foron‑ ‘eagle’
PIE *hâ‚ƒĂ©ron‑s

Cognates

Gk ᜄρΜÎčς ‘bird’, Ger Adler ‘eagle’

wrĂ w.

to make free, to free someone-dat

Etymology

NLem warw‑a
LMLem, MLem warw‑yr
OLem hwarhw‑
PLem *hwarhw‑, u-stem adjective of
PIE *h₁uÌŻerh₁‑ ‘wide, broad’

Cognates

Gk Δᜐρύς ‘wide, broad’, TochA wĂ€rts ‘broad’

wrĂ xk.

to make arms (the limbs)

Etymology

NLem wronk‑a
LMLem, MLem wronk‑yr
OLem wronk‑ ‘hand’
PLem *wronk‑
PIE *uÌŻrĂłnk‑eh₂

Cognates

Lit rankà ‘hand, arm’

wrĂ xf.

self-transporting: to flow somewhere-dat etc.

Usage notes

This is a movement verb for fluids and things metaphorically like fluids such as flags, coats or long hair. For actions ‘flowing’ smoothly, hràw. is more appropriate.

Etymology

NLem wirxf‑a
LMLem wìrxaf‑a ‘flow swiftly’
MLem wiirxaf‑a
OLem wīr‑xaf‑ ‘swift stream or river’, compound of
  OLem wÄ«r‑ ‘young, strong’
PLem *wīr‑ ‘young, strong (man)’, r-stem adjective of
PIE *uÌŻih₁‑
 —and—
  OLem xaf‑ ‘water, stream’
PLem *xaf‑ ‘water’ [animate], ‘stream’
PIE *hâ‚‚Ă©p‑s

Cognates

Lat vir ‘man’; Ved ā́p ‘water’

wrĂ f.

to make brown, to brown, to tan

wrĂŹlf. a tan

wryfnÌs. bromine (symbol: Κ)

Etymology

gender change of
NLem war‑a
LMLem, MLem war‑yr
OLem war‑ ‘glossy brown’
PLem *bwar‑ ‘shiny, glossy’, r-stem adjective of
PIE *bʰeh₂‑ ‘shine’

Gender change avoided homonymy with wrà. ‘carry, bear’, and is in line with the fact that nearly all basic colour terms are have a ‘male’ poststem (with the notable exception of orange).

Most basic colour terms in Lemizh are r-stem Caland adjectives, perhaps motivated by the word for ‘red’.

Cognates

Gk φα᜷Μω ‘show, bring to light’, Ger bohnern ‘polish’

wrOnĂ .

to make metaphors, to make metaphorical, to express something-dat as/using a metaphor-acc

Etymology

NLem wrOn‑a
LMLem wer‑en‑yr ‘trope, metaphor’, compound of
  LMLem, MLem wer‑a ‘carry, bear’
OLem wer‑
PLem *bwer‑, Narten present of
PIE *bʰer‑
 —and—
  LMLem, MLem en ‘between’
OLem hen ‘in’
PLem *hen
PIE *h₁en

This is a calque of Koi ÎŒÎ”Ï„Î±Ï†ÎżÏáœ± ‘trope, metaphor’.

Cognates

Eng bear ‘carry’; Eng in

wnĂ d.

to split something-dat into something-acc [e.g. pieces, in two] with an axe

wnĂčd. axe

Usage notes

The axe has traditionally been seen as a lowly and despicable tool, as attested from Old Lemizh. The Winged Axe, however, is held in great esteem.

Etymology

NLem, LMLem, MLem wind‑a
OLem wind‑
PLem *bwind‑ ‘split’, nasal-infix present of
PIE *bÊ°eiÌŻd‑

doublet of wĂ v.

Cognates

Eng bite, fissure (via Lat findƍ ‘split’)

wmĂ .

to cover (put over) something-dat with something-acc;
acc, perfect: to cover (be over) something-dat

wmÌ. a cover (lid, covering cloth, etc.); also a lady’s poncho

Etymology

NLem wmU‑a ‘winter coat; cover’
LMLem wermÒ‑yr ‘winter coat’
MLem wermOO‑yr ‘coat’
OLem wer‑mö‑, compound of
  OLem wer‑ ‘carry, bear’
PLem *bwer‑, Narten present of
PIE *bʰer‑
 —and—
  OLem mö‑ ‘fleece (?)’
PLem *mƍ‑
PIE *mĂłiÌŻs

doublet of wmĂ f.

Cognates

Eng bear ‘carry’; Lit maÄ©ĆĄas ‘sack’

wmĂ b.

to weave something-dat into something-acc

wmÌb. woven fabric
wmĂčb. weaving tool, also the constellation corresponding to part of Carina (see appendix, Constellations)

Usage notes

This word is used as a metaphor for the fabric of the universe (as in English), and in physics jargon for the microwave background.

Etymology

NLem, LMLem, MLem wemb‑a
OLem wemb‑
PLem *wemb‑, Narten present of
PIE *uÌŻebʰ‑ ‘weave, wrap around’

doublet of mĂ px. and wĂ b.

Cognates

Eng weave, Gk áœ‘Ï†Î±ÎŻÎœÏ‰ ‘weave’

wmĂ f.

to make coats

Etymology

gender change of
NLem wmU‑a ‘winter coat; cover’
LMLem wermÒ‑yr ‘winter coat’
MLem wermOO‑yr ‘coat’
OLem wer‑mö‑, compound of
  OLem wer‑ ‘carry, bear’
PLem *bwer‑, Narten present of
PIE *bʰer‑
 —and—
  OLem mö‑ ‘fleece (?)’
PLem *mƍ‑
PIE *mĂłiÌŻs

NLem wmUa ‘winter coat’ developed a metonymical meaning ‘to cover’, which became the primary meaning of the regular descendant ModLem wmà.. The original sense ‘coat’, i.e. the garment, mainly lives on in the masculinised form wmàf..

Cognates

Eng bear ‘carry’; Lit maÄ©ĆĄas ‘sack’

wdrĂ g.

to fight (with/against) someone-dat

Usage notes

This verb still has connotations of the sounds and smells of an old-fashioned mĂȘlĂ©e, and the blood-red colour, although fights are usually much more civilised today. Mostly. Under favourable circumstances.

Etymology

NLem wdrogn‑a
LMLem, MLem bodaragn‑yr ‘drum’
PCelt *bodar‑ágn‑os, instrumental noun of
  PCelt *bodar‑ós ‘deaf’, r-stem adjective of
PIE *bʰedʰh₁‑ ‘deafen’

doublet of podaRĂ g.

Cognates

Ir bodhrán ‘kind of drum’, Ved badhirá ‘deaf’

wzĂ .

to protect someone/something-dat (from minor harm)

wzinskrĂčc. thimble (also the constellation which forms a small part of Centaurus, Crux and Musca; see appendix, Constellations) (⇐ ⇔ wzĂč skrĂčci. ‘means of protecting a finger’)

Etymology

gender change of
NLem wzar‑k‑a ‘umbrella’, compound of
  NLem wzar‑a ‘rain’
LMLem, MLem wuzar‑yr
OLem wuzar‑
PLem *wozar‑ ‘water’ [inanimate]
PIE *uÌŻĂłdrÌ„, deverbal noun of
  PIE *uÌŻed‑ ‘well, gush’
 —and—
  NLem, LMLem, MLem k‑a ‘opposition’
Ghe q‑a /qa/

doublet of wzĂ hk.

Cognates

Eng water, undulate (via Lat unda ‘wave’), Gk ᜕Ύωρ ‘water’

wzĂ c.

to rain somewhere-dat etc.

wzĂšc. rain cloud
wzÌc. the rain

wzycrÌ. raindrop

Usage notes

Unsurprisingly, rain is associated with weeping and thus sadness. Together with xnÌt. ‘wind’, which can stand for happiness because of its whistling, this gives us metaphors such as — wzyncÒ xnÌntO. ‘with (wildly) mixed feelings’, attested from Early New Lemizh.

Etymology

NLem wzar‑a
LMLem, MLem wuzar‑yr
OLem wuzar‑
PLem *wozar‑ ‘water’ [inanimate]
PIE *uÌŻĂłdrÌ„, deverbal noun of
  PIE *uÌŻed‑ ‘well, gush’

PIE also had an animate word for water, *hâ‚‚Ă©p‑s; see xĂ f..

Cognates

Eng water, undulate (via Lat unda ‘wave’), Gk ᜕Ύωρ ‘water’

wzĂ hk.

to protect someone/something-dat with an umbrella

wzĂčhk. umbrella

Etymology

NLem wzar‑k‑a, compound of
  NLem wzar‑a ‘rain’
LMLem, MLem wuzar‑yr
OLem wuzar‑
PLem *wozar‑ ‘water’ [inanimate]
PIE *uÌŻĂłdrÌ„, deverbal noun of
  PIE *uÌŻed‑ ‘well, gush’
 —and—
  NLem, LMLem, MLem k‑a ‘opposition’
Ghe q‑a /qa/

doublet of wzĂ .

Cognates

Eng water, undulate (via Lat unda ‘wave’), Gk ᜕Ύωρ ‘water’

wxĂ jg.

to promise something-acc to someone-dat

wxÙljg. keep a promise to someone-dat

Etymology

NLem wxung‑a
LMLem, MLem wixung‑a
OLem hwihung‑ ‘speak solemnly’
PLem *hwehung‑, e-reduplicated athematic present of
PIE *h₁uÌŻegʷʰ‑

Cognates

Eng vow (via Lat voveƍ ‘vow, promise’)

xĂ .

relative pronoun type II level n−5: see unit 6, Relative pronouns

Etymology

NLem, LMLem, MLem x‑a, formed after the Ghean relative pronouns
a f‑a s‑a sh‑a x‑a / fˇ‑a sˇ‑a shˇ‑a xˇ‑a
/a Éža s̟a ʃa χa / ÎČa z̟a ʒa ʁa/

xalĂ .

to make apples

xalĂš. apple tree
xalÌ. apple

Usage notes

Apple trees are said to always be on time in producing their fruit. Since Late Middle Lemizh, you can praise a punctual person by calling them an apple tree; and xalĂ R. or xalĂČR. is the end of summer (whereas frĂ Rxk. and frĂČRxk. refer to early summer).

Etymology

NLem xaOl‑a
LMLem xàÒl‑yr
MLem xayOOl‑yr
OLem xayöl‑
PLem *xawƍl‑
PIE *hâ‚‚Ă©bƍl

Cognates

Eng apple, Avalon (via a Celtic language)

xalĂ v.

to make intestines

Usage notes

This word specifically refers to the part of the intestinal tract below the stomach.

Etymology

NLem xal‑ev‑a, clarifying compound of
  NLem xal‑a
LMLem xàl‑yr
MLem xayl‑yr ‘tube’
OLem xayl‑
PLem *xawl‑
PIE *hâ‚‚Ă©uÌŻl‑os
 —and—
  NLem, LMLem, MLem ev‑a ‘eat’
OLem hedh‑
PLem *hedh‑, Narten present of
PIE *h₁ed‑

Cognates

Gk αᜐλáœčς ‘flute, pipe’; Eng eat

xarĂ hk.

to make a synodic month, a time span from one new moon to the next, i.e. of 29.53 days on average (see appendix, Moon calendar and Units of measurement for usage)

Etymology

NLem xar‑ihk‑a, clarifying compound of
  NLem xar‑a
LMLem, MLem jixar‑yr ‘year’
OLem jihar‑
PLem *jehar‑
PIE *iÌŻĂ©h₁rÌ„
 —and—
  NLem ihk‑a ‘Moon’
LMLem, MLem ihk‑ar
Ghe ishq‑ə̄ /ÉȘʃqɯː/

The meaning in MLem and LMLem is somewhat unclear; see OtĂ ..

Cognates

Eng year, hour (via Gk ᜄρ៱ ‘period of time’)

xarpĂ .

to make harpies (also the constellation spanning Scutum and parts of Sagittarius and Ophiuchus; see appendix, Constellations)

Etymology

NLem xarpU‑a, academic loan of
Koi ግρπυÎč‑α, of unknown origin

The LMLem word was xàrpU‑yr, which would have given NLem **xarp‑a, homonymous with the word for ‘hook’. Therefore the word was re-made from the Koi.

Cognates

Eng harpy

xĂ d.

to make hares (also the constellation Lepus; see appendix, Constellations)

Etymology

NLem xOdn‑a
LMLem xÒdrn‑yr
MLem xOUdrnu‑yr
OLem xĂ¶ĂŒdrnu‑
PLem *xƍw‑drnu‑, compound of
  PLem *xƍw‑ ‘ear’
PIE *h₂áč“uÌŻs
 —and—
  PLem *drnu‑ ‘run’, nasal-infix present of
PIE *dreuÌŻâ€‘

The PLem compound apparently means something like ‘[long-]eared runner’.

Cognates

Eng ear; Ved drávati ‘runs’

xĂ k.

to make points (also points in geometry, Lemizh commas or hexadecimal separators [,]), to sharpen something-ben to a point

xykdwÌ. Lemizh full stop [.]

Etymology

NLem xak‑a
LMLem, MLem xak‑yr
OLem xak‑ ‘sharpen (to a point)’
PLem *xaç‑ ‘be sharp’, Narten present of
PIE *h₂ek̑‑

Cognates

Ger eggen ‘harrow’, Lat aceƍ ‘be sour’

xĂ ps.

to make weather;
(in measurements, else informal) to make 65536⁔ individuals (see appendix, Units of measurement)

djUtxÌps. Jovian day, the Lemizh equivalent of Thursday (symbol: Å; see appendix, Date)

Usage notes

The name of the Indo-European sky god, equivalent to Jupiter/Zeus, has been used metonymically to refer to the weather since Old Lemizh. From Early New Lemizh times onwards, this word is used exclusively to describe the weather (both fair and rough). It is also found compounded in the name of a weekday.

The planet Jupiter, as well as the god, is called djeipysrÌd. in Modern Lemizh.

Etymology

simplification and voicing assimilation (from the weekday) of
NLem djeps‑a
LMLem djùpys‑yr ‘Father Sky’
MLem djeipys‑yr, haplology of
OLem djeipysir‑
PLem *djēw‑paser‑, compound of
  PLem *djēw‑ ‘day’
PIE *diÌŻáž—u‑s ‘sky’
 —and—
  PLem *paser‑ ‘father’
PIE *phÌ„â‚‚tĂ©r‑s

Cognates

Gk ΖΔύς Î Î±Ï„ÎźÏ ‘Father Zeus’, Lat Jupiter

xĂ j.

to make grass

Etymology

NLem xoj‑a ‘grass(land)’
LMLem xĂČj‑yr
MLem xouj‑yr ‘pasture’
OLem xouj‑
PLem *xowj‑
PIE *h₂óuÌŻi‑s ‘sheep’

Cognates

Eng ewe, Lat ovis ‘sheep’

xajRĂ .

to make cranes (the birds; also the constellation corresponding roughly to Columba and Caelum; see appendix, Constellations)

Etymology

NLem xajR‑a
LMLem xàj‑Rarj‑yr, compound of
  LMLem xĂ j‑yr ‘waterfowl’
MLem xayj‑yr ‘(water?) bird’
OLem xayj‑ ‘bird’
PLem *xawj‑
PIE *hâ‚‚Ă©uÌŻi‑s
 —and—
  LMLem, MLem Rarj‑ar ‘colour’
OLem gharj‑
PLem *ggharj‑ ‘paint, anoint’, root present of
PIE *gÊ°reiÌŻâ€‘

The bird, originally just the common crane (Grus grus), is named for its prominent black, white and red head.

Cognates

Lat avis ‘bird’; Eng grimace, Gk χρ᜷ω ‘paint, anoint’

xĂ jq.

to make mountains

xijqjmÌx. iceberg (⇐ ⇔ xÌjq jmÌxi. ‘mountain made from ice’)

Usage notes

Living in a relatively flat country, the Lemizh threshold for calling something a mountain is pretty low. Their highest mountain, at the border to Heptengia, is 2544 metres above sea level; for (say) Danubians, this is scarcely more than a hill.

Etymology

NLem xojqt‑a
LMLem xĂČjfust‑yr ‘rock’
MLem xoujfust‑yr
OLem xoujfust‑
PLem *xowj‑fost‑ ‘rock, boulder (in a pasture or field)’, compound of
  PLem *xowj‑ ‘pasture’
PIE *h₂óuÌŻi‑s ‘sheep’
 —and—
  PLem *fost‑ ‘bone’
PIE *hâ‚ƒĂ©sth₁

Cognates

Eng ewe; Lat os ‘bone’

xĂ c.

to ride a horse etc.-dat (focusing on the horse being directed) or -acc (focusing on the horse moving)

xìc., xÌc. mount (animal/device used to ride on)

Usage notes

As this word implies steering, it is unsuitable for translating phrases such as ‘ride a train’; use jàx. with an instrumental object instead. Also compare ràt. which means steering without necessarily mounting up.

Etymology

NLem xic‑a
LMLem xìc‑a
MLem xiic‑a ‘drive’
OLem xīzh‑
PLem *xīzh‑, i-reduplicated athematic present of
PIE *h₂eg̑‑

Cognates

Eng act (via Lat agƍ ‘drive’)

xĂ cg.

to shine at something-dat, to make/produce light, to be light/bright (of a light source)

xĂšcg: good! great!

xacgàzw. to twinkle (⇐ ⇔ xàcg Ìzwa. ‘shine erratically’)
xycgrÌ. photon
xycgmyhrù. laser (⇐ myhrÌ xÌcgi. ‘one sort of light’)
xycgmyhrÌ. laser light, laser beam

Etymology

NLem xargr‑a
LMLem, MLem xargr‑yr
OLem xargr‑ ‘bright’
PLem *xargr‑, r-stem adjective of
PIE *h₂erg̑‑ ‘white, bright, fast’

Cognates

Gk áŒ„ÏÎłÏ…ÏÎżÏ‚ ‘silver’, TochB ārkwi ‘white’

xĂ z.

to breathe (out) at someone/something-dat;
dat: to breathe (in)

xĂčz. lung

xàz rÌy. take a breath
xàz rydmÌy. take a deep breath (both used literally)

Usage notes

As breathing in is usually the more important part of breathing, this verb has the breather typically in the (agentive) dative. — Compare the remark on self-receiving plot usage of ‘eat, read, sleep, dream’.

Etymology

NLem xez‑a
LMLem xùz‑a
MLem xeez‑a
OLem xēz‑
PLem *xāz‑, Narten present of
PIE *h₂eiÌŻd‑ ‘swell’

Cognates

Gk ÎżáŒ°ÎŽÎ­Ï‰ ‘swell’, Arm ayt ‘cheek’

xaxpqĂ .

to make swans (also the constellation Cygnus; see appendix, Constellations)

Etymology

NLem xaxpfi‑a ‘mute swan (Cygnus olor)’
LMLem xàj‑pifì‑yr, compound of
  LMLem xĂ j‑yr ‘waterfowl’
MLem xayj‑yr ‘(water?) bird’
OLem xayj‑ ‘bird’
PLem *xawj‑
PIE *hâ‚‚Ă©uÌŻi‑s
 —and—
  LMLem pifì‑yr ‘bulge’ [noun]
MLem pifii‑yr
OLem pifī‑ ‘swell’
PLem *pifī‑, i-reduplicated athematic present of
PIE *peiÌŻh₁‑

For LMLem xĂ j‑pifì‑yr, lit. ‘bulge swan’, compare Ger Höckerschwan, lit. ‘hump swan’ (referring to the knob on its bill). In NLem, when the second component had come to mean angry, the name of this quite aggressive waterfowl was reinterpreted as ‘angry bird’.

The term was generalised to include all swans in modern times. The whooper swan (Cygnus cygnus), the other species of swan found in Lemaria, was called xàj‑gan‑yr ‘singing swan’ in LMLem.

Cognates

Lat avis ‘bird’; Ved pínvate ‘swells’

xĂ xs.

to rotate, turn something-acc (continuously), to roll something-acc somewhere-dat etc., also non-sending;
self-transporting: to rotate, to roll somewhere ditto;
(mathematics) the curl of a vector field-acc (curl F = ∇[mFn] ≡ ∇m Fn âˆ’ âˆ‡n Fm)

xĂčxs. axis, axle

Etymology

NLem, LMLem, MLem xaxs‑a
OLem xaçs‑ ‘axis, axle’
PLem *xaçs‑
PIE *hâ‚‚Ă©k̑s‑os

doublet of xaxsĂ .

Cognates

Eng axle, axis (via Lat axis)

xaxsĂ .

to waltz with someone-dat (the leader [usually the man] is in the nom and the follower [usually the lady] in the dat); a waltz (action of dancing)

xaxsĂš. leader in waltz
xaxsĂŹ. follower in waltz

Etymology

NLem, LMLem, MLem xaxs‑a ‘rotate’
OLem xaçs‑ ‘axis, axle’
PLem *xaçs‑
PIE *hâ‚‚Ă©k̑s‑os

doublet of xĂ xs.

Cognates

Eng axle, axis (via Lat axis)

xĂ sk.

to search, to look/listen for something-acc;
agentive acc: to hide from someone-nom

xÙlsk. to find something-dat

xasktĂ kf. to research at university
xiskrĂčc. compass (tool for determining the cardinal directions) (⇐ ⇔ xĂčsk rÌci. ‘means for searching south’)

xàsk dmàta. look out for; xàsk xOàja. listen for (to explicitly distinguish them from ‘look for’)

Usage notes

Since Middle Lemizh, this verb connotes that the searched-for thing or person is actively hiding or concealing itself. Conversely, with agentive accusative it can express ‘hide from someone (who is searching for you)’, literally ‘have someone looking for you’.

Etymology

NLem, LMLem, MLem xesk‑a
OLem xisk‑
PLem *xisk‑, sk̑-present of
PIE *h₂eiÌŻs‑

Cognates

Eng ask, Lat qu‑aerƍ ‘ask’

xĂ f.

to make water

Usage notes

Water is mythologically and poetically seen as male, matching the non-zero poststem; vnù. ‘fire’, by contrast, is female.

Etymology

NLem xaf‑a
LMLem, MLem xaf‑yr
OLem xaf‑ ‘water, stream’
PLem *xaf‑ ‘water’ [animate], ‘stream’
PIE *hâ‚‚Ă©p‑s

PIE also had an inanimate word for water, *uÌŻĂłdrÌ„; see wzĂ c..

Cognates

Ved ā́p ‘water’, Ir abhainn ‘river’

xepĂ z.

to make roots

Usage notes

This word normally refers to roots of trees, not to edible roots such as carrots; except in a botanical context where it denotes roots of any plant.

Etymology

NLem xepOz‑a
LMLem xùpÒz‑yr
MLem xeepOOz‑yr
OLem xēpöz‑
PLem *xā‑pƍz‑, compound of
  PLem *xā‑ ‘oak’
PIE *hâ‚‚Ă©iÌŻg̑‑s
 —and—
  PLem *pƍz‑ ‘foot’
PIE *páč“d‑s

Cognates

Alb enjĂ« ‘European yew; stinking juniper’; Eng foot

xyrtksĂ .

to make the goddess Diana/Artemis; to make the minor planet Pallas

Usage notes

See djeipysrĂ d. for some information on Lemizh polytheism.

Etymology

gender change of
NLem xyrtksor‑a, academic loan of
OLem xyrtksor‑ ‘Bear-Lady’
PLem *xartk‑sor‑, feminine of
  PLem *xartk‑ ‘bear’
PIE *hâ‚‚Ć•Ì„tk̑‑os

Artemis was chosen as the namesake for the minor planet Pallas because of its high inclination to the ecliptic (35°) – it ventures far into the wilderness, so to speak.

doublet of xrĂ tx.

Cognates

Eng Arctic (via Gk ጄρÎșÏ„ÎżÏ‚ ‘bear’), Lat ursus ‘bear’

xikĂ .

to sneak something-acc in somewhere-dat, to slyly and secretly introduce something-acc to somewhere-dat

xikÌ. a Trojan horse

Etymology

NTroy ÏČÎčΟΟω /ˈhikko/ ‘horse’
OTroy ÏČÎčÏ™Ï™â€‘ÎżÏ‚ /ˈhikkos/
SHell *híqq‑os, unexplained reflex of
PIE *h₁ék̑uÌŻâ€‘os

doublet of Ă hw. and ehwĂ .

Cognates

Lat equus ‘horse’, Gk áŒ”Ï€Ï€ÎżÏ‚ ‘horse’

xoĂ .

to slide something-acc somewhere-dat etc., also non-sending;
self-transporting: to slide somewhere ditto;
acc: to slip on something-nom/caus (especially soap)

Etymology

NLem, LMLem xo‑a ‘slip’, an onomatopoeia

xOĂ j.

to make/produce a sound;
dat: to hear (agentive: listen to) something-nom, the sound of something-acc

xOĂčj. ear

xOejfàw. dat: to listen to the radio (⇐ ⇔ xOàj fÌwe. ‘hear something far away’)
dmetfĂčw. the medium of radio broadcasting; radio receiver

Etymology

poststem from plural of
NLem xO‑a
LMLem xÒ‑a
MLem xOU‑a
OLem xĂ¶ĂŒâ€‘ ‘ear’
PLem *xƍw‑
PIE *h₂áč“uÌŻs

The plural poststem comes from the fact that we have two ears.

Cognates

Eng ear, Lat auris ‘ear’

xudjĂ s.

to testify something-acc to someone-dat

xudjĂšs. a witness (e.g. at court)

Usage notes

Originally used only for witnesses testifying at court (as in NTroy), this word now can also express testifying in other, more informal contexts.

A witness in the sense of someone being present at a ceremony such as a wedding or the signing of a document is called frodjĂŹ..

Etymology

NTroy Ï‡ÎżÎ¶Îčσ /ˈxudzis/ ‘guest, witness (at court)’
OTroy Ï‡ÎżÏƒÏ„Îč‑ς /ˈxosdis/ ‘stranger, foreigner’
SHell *khósti‑s
PIE *gÊ°Ăłsth₂i‑s

doublet of RĂ st.

Cognates

Eng host, guest (via Lat hospes ‘host, guest’)

xUxtrĂ .

to make comets

Etymology

NLem xUxter‑a, academic loan of
OLem xĂŒâ€‘xter‑, compound of
  OLem xĂŒâ€‘ ‘blow’
PLem *xƫ‑, root present of
PIE *h₂uÌŻeh₁‑
 —and—
  OLem xter‑ ‘planet’
PLem *xter‑
PIE *h₂stĂ©r‑s ‘star’

The regular NLem outcome would be xter‑a (with apocope of U), which is homophonous with the word for ‘star’; so, the word was re-made from OLem.

The literal meaning ‘blowing/blown planet’ could refer to its ‘blowing’ tail or to comets’ habit of disappearing, as if they were blown away with the wind.

Cognates

Eng wi‑nd; Eng star

xlĂ .

to make/produce wool

xlĂš. a wooly animal

Usage notes

When unqualified, this word is usually taken to refer to sheep’s wool.

Etymology

NLem xUl‑a
LMLem xÙel‑yr
MLem xUeel‑yr
OLem xĂŒÄ“l‑
PLem *xuwēl‑, Lindeman’s variant of
PIE *h₂uÌŻĂ©lh₁‑s

Cognates

Eng wool, Lat lāna ‘wool’

xlĂ j.

to behave strangely, oddly; to make one’s actions-acc strange, odd

Usage notes

This word denotes neither ‘foreign’ (that’s mesor‑tynÌ.) nor ‘unfamiliar’.

Etymology

NLem xalj‑a
LMLem, MLem xalj‑yr
OLem xalj‑ ‘(an)other’
PLem *xalj‑
PIE *hâ‚‚Ă©liÌŻâ€‘os

Cognates

Eng else, Lat alius ‘(an)other’

xRĂ .

to make adult(s);
dat: to come of age

Etymology

NLem, LMLem, MLem xuR‑a ‘come of age’
OLem xugh‑
PLem *xuɩ‑, root present of
PIE *h₂euÌŻg‑ ‘strong’

xRà. used to be restricted to girls’ coming of age, while the ‘male’ variant xRàj. was reserved for boys. The latter word is obsolete now.

Cognates

Ger auch ‘also’, Lat augeƍ ‘increase, enlarge, honour’

xRĂ bv.

acc: to blow (of a gale or strong breeze)

xRÌbv. gale, strong breeze
xRĂšbv. gale (poetic, personifying)

xRùmbv rilckÌOr. a silly person, especially one who acts against their own interests by not thinking something through (lit. ‘someone like the North Wind’ — after a story in which the North Wind tries to get a traveller to take of his coat by making him cold)

Usage notes

see xnĂ t.

Etymology

NLem xURbw‑a ‘strong breeze’
LMLem xÙRbw‑yr ‘wind force 3/6’
MLem xU‑yRbw‑yr, compound of
  MLem xU‑a ‘blow’
OLem xĂŒâ€‘
PLem *xƫ‑, root present of
PIE *h₂uÌŻeh₁‑
 —and—
  MLem yRbw‑yr ‘3/6’
Ghe xpËĄâ€‘É™Ì„ /ʁbÊ·ÉŻË/

This word comes from the Middle Lemizh nautical wind scale. It has entered everyday language and hasn’t been used in its old technical sense for well over a millennium.

Cognates

Eng wi‑nd

xrĂ .

to make a length unit, a length of 92.023 millimetres (see appendix, Units of measurement)

Etymology

NLem xer‑a, academic loan of
Koi χΔ᜷ρ ‘hand’
SHell *kheī́r
PIE *gÌ‘Ê°Ă©s‑or‑s, r-stem noun of
  PIE *g̑ʰes‑ ‘grip’

The name of the basic length unit was chosen for the width of a hand.

doublet of gcrĂ . and jĂ s.

Cognates

Eng chiro‑practic (via Koi), TochB áčŁar ‘hand’

xrĂ tx.

to fear, to be afraid or scared of someone or something-acc/causal-transporting (also dat/causal-receiving; see unit 3, Ambiguous usage);
agentive caus, causal-reflexive: to frighten someone-nom

Usage notes

This verb denotes ‘cold’ fear as opposed to ‘hot’ fear, i.e. a fright or shock, which is bvmàp..

Etymology

NLem xartx‑a
LMLem, MLem xartk‑yr ‘bear’
OLem xartk‑
PLem *xartk‑
PIE *hâ‚‚Ć•Ì„tk̑‑os

doublet of xyrtksĂ .

Cognates

Eng Arctic (via Gk ጄρÎșÏ„ÎżÏ‚ ‘bear’), Lat ursus ‘bear’

xrĂ p.

to hook something-acc/dat

xrĂčp. a hook

Etymology

NLem xarp‑a
LMLem, MLem xarp‑yr
OLem xarp‑
PLem *xarf‑ ‘plough’, root present of
PIE *h₂erh₃‑

Cognates

Lat arƍ ‘plough’, Lit ariĂč ‘plough’

xrĂ j.

(to pursue) a profession (see unit 6, Compounds from brackets)

Etymology

gender change of
NLem xer‑a
LMLem xùr‑a
MLem xeer‑a ‘get up, get to work’
OLem xēr‑
PLem *xār‑
PIE *hâ‚‚Ă©iÌŻrÌ„ ‘day, morning’

Masculinisation occurred at a time when professional work was mainly done by men, while women stayed at home with their children. Things have long since changed, but the language is stuck with this anachronism.

Cognates

Eng ear‑ly, Gk ጄρÎčâ€‘ÏƒÏ„ÎżÎœ ‘breakfast’

xrĂ w.

to make wolves (also the constellation Lupus; see appendix, Constellations)

Usage notes

Calling someone a wolf primarily has referred to their strength and leadership qualities since Old Lemizh (as opposed to their fierceness or savagery).

Etymology

NLem xrOm‑a
LMLem, MLem xrem‑yr
OLem xrem‑
PLem *kxrem‑ ‘howl (of wolves)’, Narten present of
PIE *gʰrem‑ ‘resound, rage’

Cognates

Ger Gram ‘grief’, Lit grumiĂč ‘resound, thunder’

xnĂ .

to make earthly;
(in measurements, else informal) to make 65536Âł individuals (see appendix, Units of measurement)

xnĂ r. the (surface of the) earth, the land, the inhabited/habitable world as opposed to the sky or mythological/religious places

djUtxnÌ. Terrestrial day, the Lemizh equivalent of Saturday (symbol: Ã; see appendix, Date)

Usage notes

The Earth as a planet among the others, as well as the goddess Terra/Gaia, is called djingmesrÌ. in Modern Lemizh.

Etymology

simplification and voicing assimilation (from the weekday), gender change of
NLem dznis‑a
LMLem dzingmùs‑yr ‘Mother Earth’
MLem dzingmees‑yr, haplology of
OLem dzingmēsir‑
PLem *dzeng‑māser‑, compound of
  PLem *dzeng‑ ‘?’, Narten present of
PIE *dÊ°Ă©g̑ʰ‑
 —and—
  PLem *māser‑ ‘mother’
PIE *mĂ©h₂ter‑s

The first part of the PLem compound *dzeng‑māser‑ is the (verbal) root of PLem *dzeng‑om‑ ‘earth’ and is of unclear meaning.

Cognates

Eng humus (via Lat humus ‘ground, earth, soil’); Eng mother

xnĂ t.

acc (poetically self-transporting): to blow (only of wind)

xnÌt. wind, breeze
xnĂšt. wind (poetic, personifying)

Usage notes

Wind is associated with whistling and thus happiness and joy, usually of a fierce kind; compare wzÌc. ‘rain’.

In the literal sense, the word normally denotes a light wind or breeze; consequently, xRÌbv. ‘gale, strong breeze’ is used for significantly lower wind speeds than the English word ‘gale’.

Etymology

NLem xont‑a ‘breeze’
LMLem, MLem xuxont‑ar ‘wind’
OLem xuhont‑
PLem *xuhont‑
PIE *h₂uh₁‑ónt‑s, root present active participle of
  PIE *h₂uÌŻeh₁‑ ‘blow’

doublet of arĂ c.

Cognates

Eng wind, Lat ventus ‘wind’

xnrĂ .

to make a spouse’s sibling, to marry someone’s acc sibling

Etymology

NLem xnir‑a ‘wife’s brother’
LMLem, MLem jinxter‑yr ‘brother-in-law’s wife’
OLem jinxter‑
PLem *jenxter‑
PIE *h₁iÌŻĂ©nh₂ter‑s ‘husband’s brother’s wife’
 —merged with—
LMLem, MLem xner‑yr ‘man’
OLem xner‑
PLem *xner‑
PIE *h₂nĂ©r‑s

The PIE word meant specifically ‘husband’s brother’s wife’, but by OLem it could also mean ‘wife’s brother’s wife’.

Cognates

Lat ianitrīcēs ‘brothers’ wives’

xmĂ j.

(in measurements, else informal) to make 65536⁷ individuals (see appendix, Units of measurement)

djUtxmÌj. Uranian day, the Lemizh equivalent of Sunday (symbol: Ç; see appendix, Date)

Usage notes

The planet Uranus is called niftnÌj. in Modern Lemizh. (See there for an explanation of the Uranus/Neptune difficulty.)

Etymology

NLem xmun‑a
LMLem, MLem nefton‑yr ‘Nephew of the Waters’
OLem nifton‑
PLem *nefton‑
PIE *nĂ©pton‑os

Cognates

Lat Neptune, Ir Nechtan

xmĂ s.

to make babies, infants (very joung human or other living beings) of a parent-nom

Etymology

NLem xmus‑a
LMLem, MLem nefos‑yr ‘descendant’
OLem nifos‑ ‘ancestor’ [sic]
PLem *nefos‑ ‘grandson, nephew’
PIE *nĂ©pot‑s

Cognates

Eng nephew (via Lat nepƍs ‘nephew, grandson’), Ger Neffe ‘nephew’

xmlĂ g.

to give milk, to nurse, suckle someone-dat;
agentive dat: to suck milk from a woman-nom, to milk an animal-nom

xmlĂšg. mammal
xmlÌg. milk
xmlĂčg. (female) breast

Usage notes

The verb is typically understood in the immediate sense of giving milk from one’s breasts (or in general, mammary glands). For translating ‘give someone milk (e.g. in a glass)’, it is safer to use dà xmlÌgy..

xmlìg. ‘the recipient of milking, the receiver of milk’ has been referring to someone receiving a benefit or favour since Early New Lemizh.

Etymology

NLem xmylg‑a
LMLem, MLem xmalg‑a
OLem xmalg‑
PLem *xmalg‑, root present of
PIE *h₂melg̑‑

Cognates

Eng milk, Gk áŒ€ÎŒÎ­Î»ÎłÏ‰ ‘I milk’

xklĂ j.

to make soap

Etymology

NLem xklon‑a
LMLem xilkĂČn‑yr
Koi ጱλÎșáœčÎœâ€‘ÎżÎœ
SHell *silkón‑on
OLem thilpkon‑
PLem *selp‑kon‑ ‘cleaning paste’, compound of
  PLem *selp‑ ‘oil, fat’
PIE *sĂ©lp‑s
 —and—
  PLem *kon‑ ‘dust, ashes’
PIE *kón‑os

Cognates

Eng salve; Eng in‑cinerate (via Lat cinis ‘ashes’)

xtĂ .

to make eight individuals

Usage notes

Eight is the number of the Far North (possibly because of the eight stars of the Plough or Big Dipper, including Alcor) and other cold and icy places, such as frozen lakes and other bodies of water. This association can be traced back to Old Lemizh times.

In Late Middle Lemizh, the number acquired an edgy quality.

Etymology

NLem xtO‑a
LMLem xtÒ‑yl
MLem xtOU‑yl
OLem çtĂ¶ĂŒâ€‘, inflected form of
PLem *oçtƍw
PIE *ok̑táč“uÌŻ

Cognates

Eng eight, Gk ᜀÎșτώ ‘eight’

xtĂ j.

to dig something-acc [e.g. a hole, a trench] somewhere-dat

Etymology

gender change of
NLem xt‑a
LMLem, MLem kt‑a
OLem kt‑ ‘harrow’ > (also) ‘dig’
PLem *ks‑ ‘order, comb’, root present of
PIE *kes‑

Cognates

Hit kiszi ‘comb’, possibly Gk ÎșÏŒÏƒÎŒÎżÏ‚ ‘order’

xtrĂ .

to reside, to live somewhere-loc/sce

Etymology

NLem xtrO‑a
LMLem uxtrù‑yr ‘home’
MLem uxtree‑yr
OLem huhtrē‑
PLem *huh‑trew‑, compound of
  PLem *huh‑ ‘be comfortable with, love’, root aorist of
PIE *h₁euÌŻk‑ ‘get used to, learn’
 —and—
  PLem *trew‑ ‘dwelling’
PIE *trĂ©b‑s

Cognates

Ved ucyasi ‘[you] are used to’; Ger Dorf ‘village’

xtrĂ j.

to make planets

Etymology

gender change of
NLem xter‑a
LMLem, MLem xter‑yr
OLem xter‑
PLem *xter‑
PIE *h₂stĂ©r‑s ‘star’

Cognates

Eng star, Gk ጀστ᜔ρ ‘star’

xpĂ d.

to make shoes

Etymology

NLem xpodm‑a
LMLem xUpĂČdem‑yr
Koi ᜑπáœč‑ΎηΌ‑α, nominalisation, compound of
  Koi áœ‘Ï€Îż ‘below’
SHell *hupo
PIE *upo
 —and—
  Koi ÎŽáœłâ€‘Ï‰ ‘bind’
SHell *dĂ©â€‘Ć, zero-grade iÌŻĂ©-present of
PIE *deh₁‑

Cognates

Lat s‑ub ‘under’; Ved dyati ‘bind’

xpĂ j.

to make almost every, nearly all (relative weight 7⁄8; see unit 7, Weighting numerals – usually with partitive bracket; see unit 8, Cardinal numerals)

Etymology

gender change of
NLem xp‑a
LMLem, MLem xp‑yr
Ghe xp‑ə̄ /χpɯː/

Gender change was triggered by the similar-sounding numeral xtĂ .. See RĂ bv. for more on Ghean weighting numerals.

xpĂ f.

to make peoples

Etymology

NLem xpif‑a
LMLem jUpìf‑yr ‘foreigner’
MLem jUpiif‑yr
OLem jĂŒpÄ«f‑ ‘a foreign people’
PLem *jƫ‑piwf‑ ‘a foreign people’, lit. ‘you drinkers’, compound of
  PLem *jĆ« ‘you’ [plural]
PIE *iÌŻuH
 —and—
  PLem *piwf‑ ‘drink’, i-reduplicated athematic present of
PIE *peh₃‑

It is unclear to which people the PLem word referred to, and whether it was a derogatory term or a title of praise.

Cognates

Eng you; Lat bibƍ ‘drink’

xprĂ .

agentive ins: to calculate a hyperbolic function of some value-dat to give some result-acc (see unit 7, Mathematical functions)

xpryprà. to calculate the hyperbolic cosine (⇐ ⇔ xprà prìly. ~ ‘calculate the frontness’)
xpryàf. to calculate the hyperbolic sine (~ ‘calculate the upness’)
xpryfàw. to calculate the hyperbolic tangent (~ ‘calculate the farness’)

See dĂ . for the connection between trigonometric and hyperbolic functions with spatial verbs.

Etymology

academic formation, gender change of
NLem xprol‑a ‘hyperbola’

See xprĂ j. for further information.

xprĂ j.

to make hyperbolas

Etymology

NLem xprol‑a
LMLem xUperbol‑yr
Koi ᜑπΔρÎČÎżÎ»â€‘áœ”, nominalisation of
  Koi ᜑπΔρ‑ÎČᜱλλ‑ω ‘exceed’, compound of
  Koi ᜑπΔρ ‘over, above’
SHell *huper
PIE *uper ‘above’
 —and—
  Koi ÎČᜱλλ‑ω ‘throw’
SHell *q̌l̄́l‑ƍ, nasal-infix present of
PIE *gʷelh₁‑ ‘hit, throw’

See also xprĂ ..

Cognates

Eng hyperbola (via Gk); Eng over; Eng ballistic (also via Gk)

xwĂ .

(to pursue) a hobby (see unit 6, Compounds from brackets)

Etymology

gender change of
NLem xwyx‑a ‘pastime, hobby’
LMLem xwyx‑yr
MLem xwyxU‑yr ‘mission, vocation’
OLem xwyxĂŒâ€‘
PLem *xwaxƫ‑ ‘follow, pursue’, e-reduplicated athematic present of
PIE *h₂uÌŻeiÌŻâ€‘ ‘run’

Cognates

Hit huwāi ‘run’

xsrĂ .

(in measurements, else informal) to make 65536ÂČ individuals (see appendix, Units of measurement)

djUtxsrÌ. Venerian day, the Lemizh equivalent of Friday (symbol: Â; see appendix, Date)

Usage notes

The planet Venus, as well as the goddess, is called usrÌ. in Modern Lemizh.

Etymology

NLem xsor‑a
LMLem, MLem uxsor‑yr ‘Lady Love’
OLem huhsor‑
PLem *huh‑sor‑, feminine of
  PLem *huh‑ ‘be comfortable with, love’, root aorist of
PIE *h₁euÌŻk‑ ‘get used to, learn’

Cognates

Ved ucyasi ‘[you] are used to’; the PLem feminine suffix is related to the second components of Eng sister and probably Lat uxor ‘wife’

xfĂ ft.

to make manganese (symbol: Ιχ)

Etymology

NLem xfaftf‑a
LMLem, MLem yxxfaftf‑yr ‘pyrolusite’
Ghe əxxfⁿafᮛf‑ə̄ /əχχɞaÉžtÌ ÉžÉŻË/

hĂ .

relative pronoun type II level n−4: see unit 6, Relative pronouns

Etymology

NLem, LMLem, MLem h‑a, formed after the Ghean relative pronouns
a f‑a s‑a sh‑a x‑a / fˇ‑a sˇ‑a shˇ‑a xˇ‑a
/a Éža s̟a ʃa χa / ÎČa z̟a ʒa ʁa/

habĂ .

to make Shabar (the capital of Lemaria)

Usage notes

There is of course an elaboate founding myth dating back to Late Middle Lemizh times, which this space is too narrow to contain.

Etymology

NLem haba‑a
LMLem hàbà‑yr
MLem haebaa‑yr ‘Shabar (kingdom)’

The further etymology is doubtful; the word is possibly related to Ar ۳ۣۚ, Heb Ś©Ś‘Ś ‘Sheba’;
or else to a Proto-Turkic word meaning ‘low’ and OPers bāğ ‘garden, orchard’ (i.e. ‘lower vineyards’);
or maybe both.

hĂ t.

to make pigs

Usage notes

The myth that pigs are dirty because they roll in their own faeces is of course completely unfounded.

Etymology

NLem hit‑a
LMLem, MLem hit‑yr, contamination of
OLem shĂŒâ€‘
PLem *sƫ‑
PIE *sĂșh₂‑s
 —with—
Ghe it‑ə̄ /ÉȘtɯː/

Cognates

Eng sow, Lat sĆ«s ‘pig’

hĂ c.

to make clean, to clean something-dat

hicbvrĂčc. washing machine
hucxĂ f. wash (clean explicitly with water)

Etymology

NLem harn‑a
LMLem, MLem harnk‑a ‘clean, tidy’
OLem sharnk‑
PLem *sarnk‑ ‘repair, restore’, nasal-infix present of
PIE *serk‑ ‘repair, recompense’

Cognates

Lat sarciƍ ‘mend, recompense’, Hit sarnikzi ‘recompense’

hĂ hs.

to make an energy-per-mass unit, an energy per mass of 4.872 millijoules per kilogram or milligrays; but not millisieverts (see appendix, Units of measurement)

Etymology

NLem hahs‑a, academic loan of
Ghe öshashssâżâ€‘É™Ì„ /Ć“Êƒaʃs̟sÌŸÉŻË/ ‘power’

This is the only unit with a Ghean etymology. It was introduced to measure the heat of combustion and food energy, but is now also used for the dose of ionising radiation.

hurĂ j.

to cackle at someone-dat

Etymology

poststem from plural of
NLem, LMLem, MLem hur‑a ‘yelp’
OLem shur‑
PLem *sur‑ ‘to sound’, root present of
PIE *suÌŻer‑

doublet of hrĂ .

Cognates

Eng swear, Ved svárati ‘sing, sound’

hlĂ .

to make salt

Usage notes

This word refers to the substance, as opposed to the taste. àhp. ‘give something a salty taste’ is used for the latter purpose.

Etymology

NLem hel‑a
LMLem hùl‑yr
MLem heel‑yr
OLem shēl‑
PLem *sāl‑
PIE *sĂ©h₂l‑s

Cognates

Eng salt, Gk ጅλς ‘salt’

hlĂ g.

to make/bulid walls

Etymology

NLem halg‑a
LMLem, MLem halg‑yr
OLem shalg‑ ‘be hindered’
PLem *salg‑ ‘end’, root present of
PIE *sleg̑‑

doublet of zmĂ j.

Cognates

Gk Î»ÎźÎłÏ‰ ‘leave off, cease’

hrĂ .

to yelp at someone-dat

Etymology

NLem, LMLem, MLem hur‑a
OLem shur‑
PLem *sur‑ ‘to sound’, root present of
PIE *suÌŻer‑

doublet of hurĂ j.

Cognates

Eng swear, Ved svárati ‘sing, sound’

hrĂ k.

to make gravel, pebbles

hrùk. ‘gravel-maker’, a legendary, ogre-like creature

Etymology

NLem hark‑a
LMLem, MLem hark‑yr
OLem shark‑
PWald *ơárkh‑a
PIE *kÌ‘Ăłrk‑eh₂

doublet of saphĂ s. and srĂ x.

Cognates

Gk ÎșρόÎșη ‘pebble’, Eng sugar

hrĂ w.

to make (a surface) smooth; to act smoothly, acc/dat: to work/go smoothly

Usage notes

In seafaring, the adjective is used with various weighting numerals to describe different grades of smoothness or roughness of the sea.

Etymology

NLem, LMLem, MLem harw‑a ‘work/go smoothly’
OLem sharw‑
PLem *sarw‑ ‘flow’, root present of
PIE *sreuÌŻâ€‘

Cognates

Gk áż„Î­Ï‰ ‘flow’, Ved srĂĄvati ‘flow’

hnĂ xt.

to happen by fate

hnĂ xt., hnĂ lxt. fate

hnaRxt‑prilkà. tUxaR‑prà. [Things have] happened by fate. [Things] will happen by chance. (loosely: The past is fate’s domain, the future is luck’s domain.)

Etymology

NLem hnunt‑a ‘healer (one mixing potions)’
LMLem, MLem mihkont‑ar
OLem mishkont‑
PLem *mishkont‑
PIE *mik̑skÌ‘â€‘Ăłnt‑s ‘mixing’, skÌ‘Ă©-present active participle of
  PIE *meiÌŻk̑‑ ‘mix’

doublet of mĂ h. and mĂ hk.

Cognates

Eng mix, Lat misceƍ ‘mix’

hkĂ t.

to make (it) autumn

Usage notes

Technically, autumn starts with the autumnal equinox (around 23rd September in our calendar) and ends with the winter solstice (around 21st December). In everyday parlance, however, the term is usually applied to the time spanning weeks 40 to 52 in the Lemizh Sun calendar, which starts and ends somewhat earlier.

Etymology

NLem hketm‑a
LMLem ihkùtm‑yr
MLem ihkeOtm‑yr ‘ninth (full) moon’
Ghe ishq‑eĂ¶áŽ›âżâ€‘É™Ì„ /ÉȘʃqɛ͜ƓtÌ âżÉŻË/, compound of
  Ghe ishq‑ə̄ /ÉȘʃqɯː/ ‘Moon’
 —and—
  Ghe eĂ¶áŽ›âżâ€‘É™Ì„ /ɛ͜ƓtÌ âżÉŻË/ ‘nine’

The months of the Ghean Moon calendar actually drifted through the seasons; but the ninth full moon came to be interpreted (probably by mistake) as the full moon near the autumnal equinox, and hence acquired its present meaning.

htenĂ .

to make flerovium (symbol: Sτ)

Etymology

named for L. Ơthénu, an Ethiynic physicist

htrĂ .

to make an older sibling of someone-nom; in Lemizh grammar: to make an earlier (left) sibling object of a later (right) one-nom

htrĂš. jounger sibling of someone-acc

Usage notes

This word, in its changing meanings, has always symbolised the (real or imagined) strength of Lemizh family bonds.

Etymology

NLem htir‑a ‘jounger sibling’
LMLem, MLem cUtir‑yr ‘daughter’
OLem zhĂŒtir‑ ‘mother, daughter?’
PLem *dzuɩter‑ ‘daughter’
PIE *dÊ°ugh₂tĂ©r‑s

Cognates

Eng daughter, Gk ÎžÏ…ÎłÎŹÏ„Î·Ï ‘daughter, maid-servant’

hzĂ d.

to make donkeys

Etymology

NLem hzOdn‑a
LMLem ehw‑xÒdrn‑yr, compound of
  LMLem, MLem ehw‑yr ‘horse’
OLem heshw‑
PLem *heshw‑
PIE *h₁ék̑uÌŻâ€‘os
 —and—
  LMLem xÒdrn‑yr ‘hare’
MLem xOUdrnu‑yr
OLem xĂ¶ĂŒdrnu‑
PLem *xƍw‑drnu‑, compound of
  PLem *xƍw‑ ‘ear’
PIE *h₂áč“uÌŻs
 —and—
  PLem *drnu‑ ‘run’, nasal-infix present of
PIE *dreuÌŻâ€‘

The donkey is literally called ‘hare-horse’ because of its long ears.

Cognates

Lat equus ‘horse’; Eng ear; Ved drávati ‘runs’

hhĂ .

to make a ‘shh’ sound, to go ‘shh’

hh: shh!

Etymology

Variants of ‘sh’ and ‘s’ are used in many languages to request silence.

sĂ .

relative pronoun type II level n−3: see unit 6, Relative pronouns

Etymology

NLem, LMLem, MLem s‑a, formed after the Ghean relative pronouns
a f‑a s‑a sh‑a x‑a / fˇ‑a sˇ‑a shˇ‑a xˇ‑a
/a Éža s̟a ʃa χa / ÎČa z̟a ʒa ʁa/

saphĂ s.

to (pay) bail to someone-dat

saphÌs. bail (security)
saphÙls. bail (release from prison in exchange for security)

Etymology

NTroy σαψςασ /ˈsapʃas / ‘sugar; bail’
OTroy σαρχ‑α /ˈsarxa/ ‘sugar’
SHell *sárkh‑ā
PWald *ơárkh‑a ‘gravel’
PIE *kÌ‘Ăłrk‑eh₂

doublet of hrĂ k. and srĂ x.

Cognates

Gk ÎșρόÎșη ‘pebble’, Eng sugar

saxĂ f.

to play/sound a trumpet

saxĂšf. trumpet player; (metaphorically) someone alerting someone-dat to an opportunity
saxĂčf. trumpet; also the constellation Sagitta (see appendix, Constellations)

Usage notes

This term is often erroneously used for a kind of single-reed instrument made of brass, which looks somewhat similar but has a quite different method of sound production.

In modern times, the sound of a trumpet has become a metaphor for a call – successful or futile – to recognise a moment of Opportunity. The trumpet player themself, though, is oblivious to the meaning of the call.

Etymology

irregular development of
NLem salpn‑a
LMLem sàlpink‑yr ‘war-trumpet’
Koi σᜱλπÎčÎłÎŸ, of unknown origin

The expected modern form would be **sĂ xp.. The additional vowel and fricativisation of p is somewhat of a mystery. It has been variously attributed to folk etymology or contamination with the names of other instruments, but no conclusive explanation exists.

sĂ sp.

to serve as a minister, to head a ministry

sĂšsp. minister
sĂŹsp. ministry (government department)
sĂČrsp. ministry building

Usage notes

Until early New Lemizh times, ministers were appointed for an indefinite time span and often amassed more money and power than reasonable. The situation got much better when they were prohibited from serving more than four years.

Understandably, Lemizh trust in politics is quite limited, which is part of the reason why democracy has been working for so long in this country. Thus, sĂčsp. ‘a means for heading a ministry’ is used to describe proceedings that are not entirely kosher.

Etymology

NLem sasp‑a
LMLem Osàspt‑ar
MLem Osayspt‑ar
Ghe ösaəspt‑ā /Ɠs̟a͜əs̟ptʌː/

selĂ .

to make an angle unit, an angle of 28â€Č 7.5″ (see appendix, Units of measurement)

Etymology

gender change of
NLem selen‑a, academic loan of
Koi ÎŁÎ”Î»áœ”Îœâ€‘Î· ‘Moon (goddess), Selene’, from
  Koi σέλα‑ς ‘light, ray, spark’
SHell *swĂ©la‑s
PIE *suÌŻel‑ ‘smoulder, burn’

The Moon has an apparent diameter of about an angle unit. Gender change occurred because the Moon is mythologically and poetically seen as female (in Lemizh as well as in Greek).

Cognates

Eng sultry, Lit svÄŻlĂč ‘smoulder’

soĂ x.

to cook something-dat (for the ingredients) / -acc (for the dish)

soĂčx. kitchen stove
soĂČrx. kitchen

soÌx dÌhy. lit. ‘ten dishes’, an opulent meal

Etymology

NLem soux‑a
  NLem tsoixe‑soux‑a ‘chef’, reanalysis of
  NLem tsoixesoux‑a
Besk tsoixĂ€sĂ„ux ‘chieftain’
PCelt *towissāk‑os ‘chief, primary’
PIE *uÌŻeiÌŻd‑ ‘see’ or *uÌŻedʰ‑ ‘lead’

This word was introduced in the TlöngĂ¶Ì€l as a term for someone who has developed cooking into an art. It replaced LMLem pexw‑a, a cognate of Eng cook.

See also txoixĂ ..

Cognates

Ir taoiseach ‘leader, prime minister’

sokrateĂ s.

to make Socrates (an ancient Greek philosopher)

Etymology

academic loan of
Koi ÎŁÏ‰Îșρᜱτη‑ς

slĂ c.

to make butter

Etymology

NLem slUc‑a
LMLem, MLem slic‑yr
OLem slizh‑
PLem *slizh‑, root present of
PIE *sleiÌŻg̑‑ ‘smear, grease’

Cognates

Eng sleek, slick

srĂ .

to make rotten; dat: to rot, decay; to rot, decay something-dat

Usage notes

This word is used to describe biological or technical decay, but not for morals or other metaphorical senses we have in English.

The adjectival use is normally with dat as we are talking about a rotting or rotten thing rather than about a thing with the properties of rottenness.

Etymology

NLem srO‑a
LMLem srù‑a
MLem sree‑a
OLem srē‑
PLem *tsrā‑
PIE *dÊ°rĂ©h₂g̑‑om ‘berry’

Cognates

Lat frāgum ‘strawberry’, Ved drā́káčŁÄ ‘vine’

srĂ b.

to write something (e.g. a letter)-fact about something-acc to someone-dat (the fact object also needs an inner fact or is absorbed by ‘write’; see unit 14, Objects related to language and the last exercise there)

srĂčb. writing utensil

Etymology

irregular development of
NLem esr‑a
LMLem ùsr‑a
MLem eesr‑a
Ghe eestÊłâ€‘a /ɛːrÌ„ra/

The elision of e- and addition of the poststem -b is probably a contamination with psràb. ‘to father’, interpreting the author of a text as its father. This development is fortunate because the uncontaminated esr‑a is pretty awkward.

Cognates

unrelated to Ger schreiben ‘write’

srĂ j.

to meet someone-dat

Etymology

poststem from plural of
NLem, LMLem, MLem sr‑a ‘link’
OLem sr‑ ‘link, bind together’
PLem *sr‑, root present of
PIE *ser‑

The NLem word for ‘meet’ was reqk‑a, which came to mean ‘touch’.

doublet of zrOnĂ . and srĂ c.

Cognates

Gk Δጎρω ‘link, bind together’, Lat serƍ ‘link, bind together’

srĂ c.

to link something-acc to something-dat

srĂčc. a link

Etymology

poststem from singular of
NLem, LMLem, MLem sr‑a
OLem sr‑ ‘link, bind together’
PLem *sr‑, root present of
PIE *ser‑

doublet of zrOnĂ . and srĂ j.

Cognates

Gk Δጎρω ‘link, bind together’, Lat serƍ ‘link, bind together’

srĂ wd.

to make adequate, functional, okay

srĂŹlwd: okay!

srywdùk. air conditioner (⇐ ⇔ Ìk srÌwdy. ‘make the air okay’; see also gyjdùk.)

Usage notes

Ghe əsÊłÉ™ffáŽ›ËĄÉ™Ì„ /ərÌ„É™ÎČÎČdÌ ËĄÉŻË/ seems to have been an all-purpose confirmation or approval. The Early New Lemizh and modern meaning is rather weak: as an interjection, it corresponds to a pretty half-hearted ‘okay’.

Etymology

NLem sruwdl‑a
LMLem, MLem ysrywwdl‑yr
Ghe əsÊłÉ™ffáŽ›ËĄâ€‘É™Ì„ /ərÌ„É™ÎČÎČdÌ ËĄÉŻË/

srĂ x.

to make sugar

Etymology

NLem sarx‑a
LMLem, MLem sarx‑yr
OTroy σαρχ‑α /ˈsarxa/
SHell *sárkh‑ā
PWald *ơárkh‑a ‘gravel’
PIE *kÌ‘Ăłrk‑eh₂

doublet of hrĂ k. and saphĂ s.

Cognates

Eng sugar, Gk ÎșρόÎșη ‘pebble’

srĂ q.

to make queues;
dat: to queue, to form a queue

srÌq. a queue
srĂŹq. a queuing person / queuing people

sriqmÌs. the constellation Queue of Mice, roghly corresponding to Microscopium, Piscis Austrinus and small parts of Indus and Sculptor (see appendix, Constellations)

nà srÙlqi. to jump the queue

Etymology

NLem sreq‑a
Br sreĂŸ ‘row, series’
PCelt *srit‑ā, of unknown origin

Cognates

Gael sreath ‘row, queue’

srUĂ .

to play a (recreational or competitive) rule-governed game

srUÌ., srUĂč. playing equipment
srUĂČr. playing board

Etymology

NLem srU‑a
LMLem srì‑a ‘drive’
MLem srii‑a
OLem srī‑
PLem *tsriw‑, possibly from
PIE *dÊ°reiÌŻbʰ‑

possible doublet of rĂ wb.

Cognates

possibly Eng drive

snĂ w.

to snow somewhere-dat etc.

snĂšw. snow cloud
snÌw. the snow

snywrÌ. snowflake

Etymology

NLem sningw‑a
LMLem, MLem snengw‑yr ‘snow cloud’
OLem sningw‑ ‘snow’
PLem *sningw‑
PIE *snĂ­gʷʰ‑os, deverbal noun of
  PIE *sneiÌŻgʷʰ‑ ‘adhere; snow’

doublet of qnexĂ .

Cognates

Eng snow, Lat nix ‘snow’

snĂ q.

to bite someone / (into) something-dat

snĂčq. incisor (tooth)

Etymology

NLem sniq‑a ‘adder; bite’
LMLem snùq‑ar ‘adder’
MLem sneeq‑ar, haplology of
OLem snēthyr‑
PLem *snēthar‑
PIE *snĂ©h₁‑trÌ„, nominalisation of
  PIE *sneh₁‑ ‘twist, spin’

The word for ‘adder’, originally ‘twister’, was reinterpreted as ‘biter’ in NLem, from which the verb ‘bite’ was generalised.

Cognates

Eng adder, Ger nĂ€hen ‘sew’

snrĂ k.

to knot a piece of string etc.-dat, to make knots

Etymology

NLem snyrk‑a
LMLem, MLem snark‑a
OLem snark‑ ‘tie, tighten’
PLem *snark‑, root present of
PIE *snerk‑

Cognates

Eng en‑snare, probably Gk ΜᜱρÎșη ‘fit, cramp’; definitely unrelated to ‘Snark’, which is also rendered snrÌk. in ModLem

smĂ .

to mean something-acc to someone-dat, to convey meaning to someone-dat

smĂč. sign

Etymology

NLem sem‑a
LMLem sùma‑yr ‘sign’
Koi Ïƒáż†ÎŒÎ±
SHell *thyā́mn̄
PIE *dÊ°iÌŻĂ©h₂‑mnÌ„, neuter abstract -mnÌ„-noun of
  PIE *dÊ°iÌŻeh₂‑ ‘notice’

doublet of djemĂ . and zmĂ s.

Cognates

Eng semantic (via Gk), Ved dhyāyati ‘think of, imagine’

smĂ j.

dat: to be (currently) aware, conscious of something-acc, to remember something-acc [inner fact for remembering to do something; inner non-fact for remembering a fact, something concrete, etc.]

See also unit 14, Differences between infinitives and gerunds.

Usage notes

This verb indicates that a person is conscious of something they know anyway. It is not used like ‘aware’ in the sense of knowing something (as in ‘He isn’t aware that people are talking about him.’).

Etymology

NLem smyn‑a
LMLem, MLem musan‑a ‘keep safe’
OLem musanh‑ ‘lift, remove’
PLem *musanh‑, nasal-infix present of
PIE *meuÌŻsh₁‑

Cognates

Ved mĂłáčŁathā ‘will rob’, TochB masa ‘went’

smĂ v.

to lick something-dat

smĂčv. (slightly vulgar if used outside the context of licking) tongue

Etymology

NLem smiv‑a
LMLem smùv‑a
MLem smeev‑a ‘smear’
OLem smēdh‑
PLem *smēdh‑, Narten present of
PIE *smeiÌŻd‑

Cognates

Eng smite

smrĂ .

to function, to be in operation

Usage notes

When applied to humans, this verb refers to monotonous, often mindless and tiring work. Contrast kRà. ‘work, do a task or job’.

Etymology

NLem smir‑a
LMLem, MLem smer‑yr ‘grease, marrow’
OLem smer‑
PLem *smer‑
PIE *smĂ©r‑s

Cognates

Eng smear, TochB áčŁmare ‘slick, oil’

smrĂ sk.

to make cabinets, cupboards

smrUlskwÌtx. bookcase (⇐ ⇔ smrÌsk wÌtxUl. ‘cupboard for books’)
etc.

smrÌsk gmril-cĂčwby. freezer (short: gmrilcĂčwb.)
smrÌsk gmrilcrĂčy. refrigerator (short: gmrilcrĂč.)

Etymology

NLem smyrsk‑a
LMLem, MLem smarsk‑a ‘lend’
OLem smarsk‑
PLem *smarsk‑, sk̑-present of
PIE *smer‑ ‘allot; receive a share’

The NLem meaning is based on the idea that you ‘lend’ a cupboard items that it will later return to you.

Cognates

Eng merit (via Lat mereƍ ‘deserve, earn’)

skĂ qk.

to make shards, to break into shards

Etymology

NLem skeqk‑a
LMLem, MLem skevk‑yr
OLem skedhk‑
PLem *skedhx‑ ‘splinter’, Narten present of
PIE *skedh₂‑ ‘splinter, scatter’

doublet of zdnĂ k.

Cognates

Gk σÎșÎŻÎŽÎœÎ·ÎŒÎč ‘disperse’, Lit kedĂč ‘burst’

sklĂ .

to make bridges (also the constellation spanning Reticulus and part of Hydrus and Dorado; see appendix, Constellations)

Etymology

NLem stel‑a ‘pillar’
LMLem stùl‑yr
Koi στ᜔λ‑η
SHell *stl̄́n‑ā
PIE *stl̄́‑n‑eh₂ ‘upright stone or slab?’, n-stem noun of
  PIE *stel‑ ‘put, make ready’

Cognates

Eng stele (via Gk), OCS po-steljǫ ‘spread out’

sklĂ g.

dat: to prove, turn out to be something-acc, to prove difficult etc.-acc

Etymology

NLem, LMLem, MLem stelg‑a ‘protrude’
OLem stelg‑
PLem *stelg‑, Narten present of
PIE *stelg‑ ‘protrude; rigid’

doublet of stĂ jg.

Cognates

Lit stulgá»čs ‘great snipe’, Eng stalk (approach quietly)

sklĂ xt.

to make rooms

Etymology

NLem sklont‑a
LMLem, MLem skylont‑yr ‘compartment’
OLem skylont‑
PLem *skalont‑ ‘splitter, separator’
PIE *sklÌ„â€‘Ăłnt‑s ‘splitting’, Narten present active participle of
  PIE *skel‑ ‘split’

doublet of sklontĂ .

Cognates

Gk σÎșÎŹÎ»Î»Ï‰ ‘stir up, hoe’, Ger Schale ‘peel, shell’

sklontĂ .

to make cells (basic units of an organism)

Etymology

NLem sklont‑a ‘room’
LMLem, MLem skylont‑yr ‘compartment’
OLem skylont‑
PLem *skalont‑ ‘splitter, separator’
PIE *sklÌ„â€‘Ăłnt‑s ‘splitting’, Narten present active participle of
  PIE *skel‑ ‘split’

doublet of sklĂ xt.

Cognates

Gk σÎșÎŹÎ»Î»Ï‰ ‘stir up, hoe’, Ger Schale ‘peel, shell’

skrĂ .

to make/lay eggs

Etymology

gender change of
NLem skrOngj‑a
LMLem, MLem dyrkterengj‑yr ‘thimble’
OLem dyrkter‑hengj‑, endocentric compound (tatpurusha) of
  OLem dyrkter‑ ‘finger’
PLem *darkter‑
PIE *drÌ„gʰ‑tĂ©r‑s ‘holder (?)’, non-event agent of
  PIE *dregʰ‑ ‘hold (fast)’
 —and—
  OLem hengj‑ ‘protection, armour’
PLem *hengj‑ ‘spines > protection, armour’
PIE *h₁ég̑ʰi‑s ‘hedgehog’

The meaning ‘egg’ is derived from the metaphorical use of ‘thimble’ as a protection for something tender and delicate, perhaps aided by the roughly similar shapes. This is one of the stranger introductions of the TlöngĂ¶Ì€l.

Cognates

Gk ÎŽÏÎŹÏƒÏƒÎżÎŒÎ±Îč ‘hold, seize’; Ger Igel ‘hedgehog’

skrĂ p.

to split, divide, break, crush etc. something-dat into something-acc [e.g. in two, into dust];
dat: to break, split, crush etc.

skrÌp. part, scrap, fragment

skriptexà. nuclear fission (⇐ ⇔ skràp texÌi. ‘split nuclei’)

Etymology

NLem, LMLem, MLem skarp‑a
OLem skarp‑
PLem *skarf‑ ‘divide, separate’, root present of
PIE *skerh₃‑

Cognates

Lit skiriĂč ‘divide, separate, distinguish’

According to the Lexikon der indogermanischen Verben, this PIE verb has to be separated from *sker‑ ‘cut’ > Eng shear; PIE *skreb‑ ‘scrape’ > Eng scrap, scrape is also unrelated.

skrĂ j.

to prick, sting someone-dat

skrĂčj. a prick, sting

Etymology

possibly dialect borrowing of
NLem skerdz‑a
LMLem, MLem skerdz‑yr
OLem skerdz‑
PLem *skerdz‑ ‘cut, sting (?)’, Narten present of
PIE *skerdʰ‑

The regular ModLem outcome would be **skrĂ dj.

Cognates

Lit skerdĆŸiĂč ‘stab, slaughter’

skrĂ c.

to work with one’s fingers, to do something-fact with one’s fingers

skrĂčc. finger

Etymology

NLem skrOr‑a
LMLem, MLem dyrkter‑yr
OLem dyrkter‑
PLem *darkter‑
PIE *drÌ„gʰ‑tĂ©r‑s ‘holder (?)’, non-event agent of
  PIE *dregʰ‑ ‘hold (fast)’

doublet of dĂ cj.

Cognates

Gk ÎŽÏÎŹÏƒÏƒÎżÎŒÎ±Îč ‘hold, seize’, OCS drŃŠĆŸÇ« ‘hold’

skmĂ .

to make 256 individuals

Etymology

NLem skam‑a
LMLem, MLem tkam‑yl
OLem tkamt‑ ‘hundred’, inflected form of
PLem *tkamtom
PIE *dk̑mÌ„tĂłm

The numeric value of this word was adapted to the Ghean hexadecimal system in Middle Lemizh.

Cognates

Eng hundred, Lat centum ‘hundred’

skmĂ w.

to work as a butcher

Etymology

NLem skmim‑a
LMLem skarpmùm‑ar
MLem skarp‑meem‑ar, compound of
  MLem skarp‑a ‘split, divide, break’
OLem skarp‑
PLem *skarf‑ ‘divide, separate’, root present of
PIE *skerh₃‑
 —and—
  MLem meem‑yr ‘meat, flesh’
OLem mēm‑
PLem *mēm‑
PIE *mᾗms

Cognates

Lit skiriĂč ‘divide, separate, distinguish’; Eng membrane (via Lat mem‑brāna ‘skin, membrane’)

skholĂ .

to teach someone-dat something-acc in school; see gwĂ t. for further plot usages

skholĂš. school teacher
skholĂŹ. pupil
skholĂČr. schoolhouse, school building/campus

skholarĂ . school lesson

Usage notes

This verb denotes basic education in school, as opposed to higher education at university (tĂ kf.) or other forms such as night school, informal teaching, etc. The super-category verb is gwĂ t..

Etymology

NLem skxol‑a ‘school’ [noun]
LMLem skxol‑yr
MLem skxol‑yr ‘leisure, rest’
OLem skçol‑
PLem *skçol‑
PIE *sg̑ʰ‑h̄₃l‑éh₂, abstract noun of
  PIE *seg̑ʰ‑ ‘hold, overpower’

The LMLem meaning is influenced by the similar sounding, and cognate, Koi ÏƒÏ‡ÎżÎ»áœ”.

Cognates

Ved sĂĄhate ‘overpower, defeat’, Eng school (via Gk ÏƒÏ‡ÎżÎ»áœ” ‘leisure; lecture, disputation’)

stĂ d.

to make stories about something-dat (or as a sibling acc object in certain constructions that have ‘story’ in the fact; like ‘poem’ in unit 14, Objects related to language)

Etymology

NLem stedr‑a ‘legend’
LMLem stùtur‑ar ‘legendary warrior’
MLem steetur‑ar
OLem stētur‑ ‘legend(ary warrior)’
PLem *stewtor‑ ‘fighter, warrior’
PIE *stĂ©uÌŻp‑tor‑s ‘hitter, brawler’, event agent of
  PIE *steuÌŻp‑ ‘push, hit’

doublet of stedrĂ j., stedrĂ c. and tĂ p.

This is the regular outcome of NLem stedra ‘legend’. Modern stedrÌj. ‘novel’ (with poststem from plural) and stedrÌc. ‘legend’ (with poststem from singular) are academic formations: the singular poststem originally signified literary forms with unity of action (drama, various forms of short stories), while the plural poststem signified forms without such unity (epos, novel).

Cognates

Eng type (via Gk), Lat stupeƍ ‘be stunned, be amazed’

stĂ jg.

to make hard, to harden

Etymology

NLem stalgr‑a
LMLem, MLem stalgr‑yr
OLem stalgr‑
PLem *stalgr‑, r-stem adjective of
PIE *stelg‑ ‘protrude; rigid’

doublet of sklĂ g.

Cognates

Lit stulgá»čs ‘great snipe’, Eng stalk (approach quietly)

stedrĂ j.

to make novels about something-dat (or as a sibling acc object in certain constructions that have ‘novel’ in the fact; like ‘poem’ in unit 14, Objects related to language)

Etymology

poststem from plural of
NLem stedr‑a ‘legend’
LMLem stùtur‑ar ‘legendary warrior’
MLem steetur‑ar
OLem stētur‑ ‘legend(ary warrior)’
PLem *stewtor‑ ‘fighter, warrior’
PIE *stĂ©uÌŻp‑tor‑s ‘hitter, brawler’, event agent of
  PIE *steuÌŻp‑ ‘push, hit’

doublet of stĂ d. (see there for further information), stedrĂ c. and tĂ p.

Cognates

Eng type (via Gk), Lat stupeƍ ‘be stunned, be amazed’

stedrĂ c.

to make legends about something-dat (or as a sibling acc object in certain constructions that have ‘legend’ in the fact; like ‘poem’ in unit 14, Objects related to language)

Etymology

poststem from singular of
NLem stedr‑a
LMLem stùtur‑ar ‘legendary warrior’
MLem steetur‑ar
OLem stētur‑ ‘legend(ary warrior)’
PLem *stewtor‑ ‘fighter, warrior’
PIE *stĂ©uÌŻp‑tor‑s ‘hitter, brawler’, event agent of
  PIE *steuÌŻp‑ ‘push, hit’

doublet of stĂ d. (see there for further information), stedrĂ j. and tĂ p.

Cognates

Eng type (via Gk), Lat stupeƍ ‘be stunned, be amazed’

strĂ .

to make cattle, cows, bulls (also the constellation Taurus, the Bull; see appendix, Constellations)

Etymology

NLem star‑a ‘bull’
LMLem stàr‑yr
MLem stayr‑yr
OLem stayr‑
PLem *stawr‑
PIE *stĂĄuÌŻr‑os

doublet of strĂ z.

Cognates

Ger Stier ‘bull’, Lat taurus ‘bull’

strĂ g.

to make boxes (small, cuboid containers)

Etymology

NLem strogn‑a
LMLem tetràgon‑yr ‘square, rectangle’
Koi Ï„Î”Ï„Ïáœ±â€‘ÎłÏ‰Îœâ€‘ÎżÎœ, compound of
  Koi τΔτρα‑ ‘four
’, combining form of
  Koi Ï„áœłÏ„Ï„Î±ÏÎ”Ï‚ ‘four’
SHell *qétwores
PIE *kÊ·Ă©tuÌŻores
 —and—
  Koi ÎłÏ‰Îœáœ·â€‘Î± ‘corner(stone), angle’
  Koi ÎłáœčΜυ ‘knee’
SHell *gĂłnu
PIE *gÌ‘Ăłnu

Cognates

Eng four; Eng knee

strĂ z.

to make Crimean

strĂ rz. Crimea

Etymology

gender change of
NLem star‑a ‘bull’
LMLem stàr‑yr
MLem stayr‑yr
OLem stayr‑
PLem *stawr‑
PIE *stĂĄuÌŻr‑os

This is a (folk etymological) calque from Gk ΀αυρÎčÎșÎź, which is actually derived from the name of the Tauroi, who lived there in the first millennium BCE. It is a shortened form of NLem jsoj‑star‑a, lit. ‘island of the bull(s)’.

doublet of strĂ .

Cognates

Ger Stier ‘bull’, Lat taurus ‘bull’

stnĂ g.

self-transporting (nom for the hobbling action, acc for walking in a hobbling fashion, for hobbling along): to hobble, limp, totter somewhere-dat etc.

Usage notes

This verb is somewhat less negative than the translations given above; it can just mean ‘walk in an awkward fashion’.

Etymology

NLem, LMLem, MLem skeng‑a
OLem skeng‑
PLem *skeng‑, Narten present of
PIE *skeng‑

Cognates

Ger hinken ‘limp’, Gk σÎșᜱζω ‘limp’

stnĂ t.

to make sparrows (also a constellation in the region of Camelopardalis’, the Giraffe’s, head; see appendix, Constellations)

Usage notes

In modern usage, this word is also loosely applied to other small birds.

Etymology

NLem skont‑a
LMLem, MLem skont‑yr
OLem skont‑
PLem *skont‑ ‘little bird, sparrow’
PIE *skₔk‑ónt‑s ‘jumping’, Narten present active participle of
  PIE *skek‑ ‘move quickly, jump’

doublet of qĂ xk.

Cognates

Ger ge‑schehen ‘happen’, Eng chic (via Fr chic and Ger schick ‘elegant’)

spĂ j.

to be sad about something-acc/causal-transporting (see unit 3, Ambiguous usage);
agentive caus, causal-reflexive: to sadden someone-nom

Etymology

NLem spalm‑a
LMLem, MLem spalnp‑a ‘disgrace’
OLem spalnp‑
PLem *spalnf‑ ‘speak publicly’, nasal-infix present of
PIE *spelh₃‑

The semantic development is from ‘speak publicly about someone (good or bad)’ via ‘disgrace someone’, metonymically to ‘fall into disgrace’ and finally ‘be downcast, be sad’.

The phonetic similarity to spàz. ‘be happy’ is incidental.

Cognates

Eng spell ‘magical formula’, Lv peÄŒu ‘vilify’

spĂ z.

to be happy about something-acc/causal-transporting (also dat/causal-receiving, see unit 3, Ambiguous usage);
agentive caus, causal-reflexive: to please someone-nom

spùz stnÌtem. happy as a lark, lit. ‘happy as a sparrow’

Usage notes

The word formerly meant ‘warm, hot’ (see below). It has been noted that causes for being happy and causes for getting warm often coincide; they include Sun, food, drink, jumping about, and friction.

Etymology

gender change of
NLem sp‑a
LMLem tp‑yr ‘warm, hot’
MLem tpu‑yr
OLem tpu‑
PLem *tpu‑, u-stem adjective of
PIE *tep‑ ‘be warm, hot’

For some strange reason, masculinisation is common in verbs of emotion; see pqàb. ‘be angry’.

The phonetic similarity to spàj. ‘be sad’ is incidental.

Cognates

Lat tepeƍ ‘be warm’, Ved tāpáyati ‘heats, pains’

spĂ sk.

to make dolphins (also the constellation Delphinus; see appendix, Constellations)

Etymology

NLem spesk‑a
LMLem tUpùsk‑yr
MLem tUpeesk‑yr
OLem tĂŒpēsk‑
PLem *tƫ‑pēsk‑, compound of
  PLem *tƫ‑ ‘swell, become strong’, root present of
PIE *teuÌŻh₂‑
 —and—
  PLem *pēsk‑ ‘fish’
PIE *pĂ©iÌŻsk̑‑os

The dolphin is not, as is often thought, named a ‘strong fish’ or a ‘humped fish’, but a ‘wombed fish’ – as evidenced by the Greek calque ΎΔλφ᜷ς ‘dolphin’ < ÎŽÎ”λφ᜻ς ‘womb’.

Cognates

Lat tĆ«ber ‘swelling, hump’; Eng fish

splĂ j.

to make shores

Etymology

NLem spolj‑a
LMLem, MLem tpolj‑yr ‘barrier’
OLem tpolhj‑ ‘fence’
PLem *tpolhj‑
PIE *tpólh₁i‑s ‘fortification’

doublet of gzlĂ s.

Cognates

Eng police (via Gk πόλÎčς ‘city’)

sprĂ dj.

self-transporting: to flee somewhere-dat etc.

Etymology

NLem, LMLem, MLem sperdz‑a
OLem sperdz‑
PLem *sperdz‑, Narten present of
PIE *sperdʰ‑ ‘run away, flee’

Cognates

Ger Spurt ‘sprint’, Ved spárdhate ‘compete’

sjĂ .

to sew something-dat into (i.e. to make) something-acc

sjĂč. needle

Etymology

NLem sje‑a
LMLem sjù‑a
MLem sjei‑a
OLem sjei‑
PLem *sjēw‑, Narten present of
PIE *siÌŻeuÌŻh₁‑

Cognates

Eng sew, OCS ĆĄijÇ« ‘sew’

swĂ zw.

to be glad about something-acc/causal-transporting (also dat/causal-receiving, see unit 3, Ambiguous usage)

Etymology

NLem swazw‑a
LMLem, MLem swazw‑yr
OLem swazw‑
PLem *swazw‑, u-stem adjective of
PIE *suÌŻĂ©h₂d‑ ‘sweet’

Cognates

Eng sweet, Gk áŒĄÎŽÏÏ‚ ‘sweet, pleasant’

swĂ v.

to hurl, throw something-acc somewhere-dat etc. (also non-sending) recklessly, aggressively;
self-transporting: to jump somewhere-dat etc. recklessly, aggressively

Usage notes

Use lĂ k. to not express an aggressive attitude for the throw or jump.

Etymology

NLem, LMLem, MLem swiv‑a
OLem swidh‑
PLem *swidh‑, root present of
PIE *suÌŻeiÌŻd‑

Cognates

Lit sváidau ‘throw, hurl’

swĂ h.

to make six individuals

Etymology

NLem sweh‑a
LMLem, MLem sweh‑yl
OLem swesh‑, inflected form of
PLem *sweshs
PIE *suÌŻĂ©k̑s

Cognates

Eng six, Gk ጕΟ ‘six’

swnĂ t.

to make someone-dat believe in something-acc;
dat, perfect or not topicalised: to believe someone-nom something-acc, to believe in something-acc (see unit 13, Verbs of certainty)

Usage notes

Belief is connotated somewhat negatively; the Lemizh have always preferred thinking to believing. For example, we usually don’t say ‘I believe it will rain tomorrow’ in Lemizh but ‘I think (qàzg.) it will rain tomorrow’; or ‘I consider it evident (khìlv.) it will rain tomorrow’ if there actually is evidence.

Etymology

NLem, LMLem, MLem swent‑a
OLem swent‑ ‘make believe’
PLem *swent‑ ‘put oneself in front > make believe’, Narten present of
PIE *suÌŻe‑dÊ°h₁‑ ‘place oneself’, compound of
  PIE *suÌŻe ‘self’
 —and—
  PIE *dÊ°eh₁‑ ‘put, make’

Cognates

Gk áŒ”ÎžÎżÏ‚ ‘habit, custom, disposition’, Ved svĂĄdhā ‘habit, custom’

swmilĂ .

to make moths (also the constellation roughly corresponding to Canes Venatici and Coma Berenices; see appendix, Constellations)

Etymology

NLem swmil‑a
LMLem mineswel‑yr
MLem minesw‑el‑yr, diminutive of
  MLem minesw‑yr ‘owl’
OLem minesw‑ ‘Goddess of wisdom’
PLem *menesw‑
PIE *men‑ésuÌŻâ€‘eh₂, nominalisation of
  PIE *men‑ ‘think’

doublet of manwĂ ., mĂ jw., mĂ sw. and minĂ .

Cognates

Gk ÎŒÎœÎŹÎżÎŒÎ±Îč ‘remember’, Lat Minerva

sxarĂ .

to make energy

Etymology

NLem sxar‑a ‘fuel’
LMLem, MLem isxar‑yr ‘vitality, survival skills’
OLem hisxar‑ ‘vitality’
PLem *hesxar‑ ‘(flowing) blood’
PIE *h₁ésh₂rÌ„

doublet of sxrĂ .

Cognates

Eng iron, Lat sanguīs ‘blood’

sxrĂ .

(archaic) to make petrol, gasoline

Usage notes

This word is archaic. Today it connotes the stink of combustion engines.

Etymology

NLem sxar‑a ‘fuel’
LMLem, MLem isxar‑yr ‘vitality, survival skills’
OLem hisxar‑ ‘vitality’
PLem *hesxar‑ ‘(flowing) blood’
PIE *h₁ésh₂rÌ„

doublet of sxarĂ .

Cognates

Eng iron, Lat sanguīs ‘blood’

sxnĂ z.

to shine at something-dat (only of the Sun)

sxnùz. Sun; Sol, Helios (god) (symbol: À)
sxnÌz. sunlight, sunshine; sunbeam, sunray

sxnyzrÌ. sunbeam, sunray

Usage notes

The Sun is mythologically and poetically seen as the male and strong counterpart of the Moon, as in most Indo-European languages. This is the source of the ‘male’ (non-zero) poststem in Modern Lemizh.

See djeipysrĂ d. for some information on Lemizh polytheism.

Etymology

gender change of
NLem sxun‑a
LMLem, MLem sxun‑ar
OLem sxun‑
PLem *sxun‑, zero grade of
PIE *sh₂uÌŻĂ©n‑s, genitive/weak stem of
  PIE *sĂ©h₂uÌŻlÌ„

Cognates

Eng Sun (generalised weak stem), Lat sƍl ‘Sun’ (generalised strong stem)

qĂ .

relative pronoun type II level n−2: see unit 6, Relative pronouns

Etymology

NLem, LMLem, MLem q‑a, formed after the Ghean relative pronouns
a f‑a s‑a sh‑a x‑a / fˇ‑a sˇ‑a shˇ‑a xˇ‑a
/a Éža s̟a ʃa χa / ÎČa z̟a ʒa ʁa/

qĂ c.

to make a temperature unit, a temperature of 1.138 kelvins (see appendix, Units of measurement)

Etymology

NLem qerm‑a, academic loan of
Koi ΞΔρΌ‑áœčς ‘warm’
SHell *qherm‑ós
PIE *gÊ·Ê°er‑m‑ós, m-stem noun of
  PIE *gÊ·Ê°er‑ ‘get warm’

doublet of gmrĂ .

Cognates

Eng thermo-meter (via Gk ΞΔρΌ‑áœčς), but perhaps not warm

qĂ zg.

to think (about) something-acc (to oneself-dat)

qĂčzg. brain

Usage notes

This verb does not only mean ‘silently communicate to oneself, ponder’ but also ‘opine, reckon’. The Lemizh hardly ever use ‘believe’ (swnàt.) for the latter purpose.

Etymology

NLem qizgw‑a
LMLem, MLem qisgw‑a
OLem thisgw‑
PLem *sisgw‑ ‘discuss (constructively), reason’, i-reduplicated athematic present of
PIE *sekʷ‑ ‘say’

Cognates

Eng say, Lat in‑quit ‘says, said’

qĂ xk.

self-transporting: to fly somewhere-dat etc.;
nom: to beat one’s wings, turn one’s propeller or rotor, etc.

Usage notes

The sense of ‘beating one’s wings’, attested from Old Lemizh, typically implies doing so effectively, powerfully (as opposed to, say, fluttering feebly).

Etymology

NLem, LMLem, MLem qexk‑a
OLem thexk‑
PLem *sexk‑, intensive of
PIE *skek‑ ‘move quickly, jump’

doublet of stnĂ t.

Cognates

Ger ge‑schehen ‘happen’, Eng chic (via Fr chic and Ger schick ‘elegant’)

qĂ s.

to make (it) winter

Usage notes

Technically, winter starts with the winter solstice (around 21st December in our calendar) and ends with the spring equinox (around 21st March). In everyday parlance, however, the term is usually applied to the time spanning weeks 1 to 13 in the Lemizh Sun calendar, which starts and ends somewhat earlier.

Etymology

NLem qisn‑a
LMLem, MLem qisn‑yr
OLem thisn‑
PLem *sisn‑ ‘age’ [verb], i-reduplicated athematic present of
PIE *sen‑ ‘old’

Winter was named as the ‘old’ part of the year long before there was a calendar that started with the winter solstice.

Cognates

Eng senile (via Lat senīlis ‘aged’), Ir sean ‘old’

qĂ f.

to make seven individuals

‘make seven’, a version of an old language game for seven players, focusing on abstract thought. Other versions of this game are for four, five or ten players, and named accordingly. The cover term for the game is dmĂ j. ‘fill (up), make full > make quite a lot’.

Etymology

NLem qif‑a
LMLem, MLem qif‑yl
OLem thift‑, inflected form of
PLem *seftam
PIE *septm̄́

Cognates

Eng seven, Gk áŒ‘Ï€Ï„ÎŹ ‘seven’

qentĂ .

self-receiving: to smoke tobacco

qentÌ. tobacco smoke
qentĂč. tobacco pipe (also the constellation in the region of Leo, Sextans and Hydra; see appendix, Constellations)

qentuglĂčf. cigar (⇐ ⇔ qentĂč glÌfu. ‘rolled tobacco pipe/implement’)

Etymology

NLem qent‑a ‘smoke (also tobacco)’
LMLem, MLem qent‑a ‘smoke (also herbs)’
OLem thent‑ ‘to smoke (also herbs)’
PLem *sent‑ ‘to smoke’, Narten present of
PIE *sen‑dʰh₁‑ ‘secrete’, compound of
  PIE *sen ‘aside, away’
 —and—
  PIE *dÊ°eh₁‑ ‘put, make’

doublet of qnĂ t.

Cognates

Eng cinder, Gk áœ„ÎœÎžÎżÏ‚ ‘dung’

qlĂ .

to farm something (e.g. a crop)-dat

qlĂš. farmer
qlĂČr. a farm

Etymology

NLem, LMLem, MLem qel‑a
OLem thel‑ ‘dwell on a land > farm’
PLem *sel‑ ‘dwell, stay’, Narten present of
PIE *sel‑

Cognates

Lat soleƍ ‘be in the habit of’, Ger Saal ‘hall’

qlĂ p.

to make tar

Etymology

NLem qelp‑a
LMLem, MLem qelp‑yr
OLem thelp‑
PLem *selp‑ ‘oil, fat’
PIE *sĂ©lp‑s

Cognates

Eng salve, possibly Gk áŒ”Î»Ï€ÎżÏ‚ ‘olive oil, fat’

qrĂ .

to make animals

Etymology

NLem qer‑a
LMLem qùr‑yr
Koi Ξ᜔ρ ‘wild beast’
SHell *thᾗr
PIE *g̑ʰuÌŻĂ©r‑s, root noun of
  PIE *g̑ʰuÌŻer‑ ‘go crookedly’

doublet of jrĂ .

Cognates

Eng feral (via Lat ferus ‘wild’), Ved hvárate ‘diverge, bend, go crookedly’

qnĂ d.

to order something-dat to give some result-acc, to put something-dat in order

Etymology

NLem qend‑a
LMLem qùnd‑a
MLem qeend‑a
OLem thēnd‑
PLem *sēnd‑ ‘succeed, reach a goal’, Narten present of
PIE *seh₁dʰ‑

Cognates

Ved sĂ­dhyati ‘succeed’, Gk ΔᜐΞ᜻ς ‘straight, direct’

qnĂ t.

to (make/produce) smoke

Usage notes

This verb is not used for smoking tobacco any more – the modern term for that is the related qentà..

Etymology

NLem qent‑a ‘smoke (also tobacco)’
LMLem, MLem qent‑a ‘smoke (also herbs)’
OLem thent‑ ‘to smoke (also herbs)’
PLem *sent‑ ‘to smoke’, Narten present of
PIE *sen‑dʰh₁‑ ‘secrete’, compound of
  PIE *sen ‘aside, away’
 —and—
  PIE *dÊ°eh₁‑ ‘put, make’

doublet of qentĂ .

Cognates

Eng cinder, Gk áœ„ÎœÎžÎżÏ‚ ‘dung’

qnexĂ .

to save (up) something (money, valuable things)-acc

Usage notes

The original meaning of this Ethiynic loan is saving (i.e. not spending or giving away) or saving up (accumulating) money or valuables. It can, however, freely be used for anything that is deemed valuable, including breath, time, memories, etc.

Etymology

Eth ĂŸnejxa ‘something conserved or preserved’
PWald *snĂ©ih‑a ‘preserved food’, nominalisation, full-grade thematic present of
PIE *sneiÌŻgʷʰ‑ ‘adhere; snow’

doublet of snĂ w.

Cognates

Eng snow, Lat nix ‘snow’

qmĂ .

to group something-dat into something-acc (see unit 7, Grouping numerals)

qmÌ. a group, (mathematics) a set

qmyhrÏk. silicon (symbol: Κ)

Etymology

NLem qem‑a
LMLem, MLem qem‑yr
OLem them‑
PLem *sem‑ ‘one, together’
PIE *sĂ©m‑s

Cognates

Eng same, similar (the latter via Lat similis)

qmĂ xz.

to make sand

Etymology

NLem qemxz‑a ‘(grain of) sand’
LMLem, MLem qemxz‑yr, with unexplained d-elision of
OLem themxdz‑
PLem *semxdz‑ ‘sand’
PIE *sĂ©mh₂‑dʰ‑os, nominal derivation of
  PIE *semh₂‑ ‘scoop up’

doublet of cmĂ k.

Cognates

Lit semiĂč ‘scoop’, Eng sand

qkrĂ dj.

to make artichokes (the vegetable) (also the constellation roughly corresponding to Vulpecula; see appendix, Constellations)

qkrĂšdj. artichoke plant

Etymology

NLem qkerdz‑a, contraction of
LMLem ev‑skerdz‑yr ‘artichoke, cardoon’, compound of
  LMLem, MLem ev‑a ‘eat’
OLem hedh‑
PLem *hedh‑, Narten present of
PIE *h₁ed‑
 —and—
  LMLem, MLem skerdz‑yr ‘prick, sting’
OLem skerdz‑
PLem *skerdz‑ ‘cut, sting (?)’, Narten present of
PIE *skerdʰ‑

This word etymologically means ‘stinging food’.

Cognates

Eng eat; Lit skerdĆŸiĂč ‘stab, slaughter’

qtrĂ .

to arrange something-dat by some property-acc (see unit 7, Grouping numerals)

Etymology

NLem qtrO‑a
LMLem ihwtrù‑yr ‘arrangement, sequence’
MLem ihwtree‑yr ‘herd’
OLem hishwtrē‑
PLem *heshw‑trew‑ ‘(horse) stable’, compound of
  PLem *heshw‑ ‘horse’
PIE *h₁ék̑uÌŻâ€‘os
 —and—
  PLem *trew‑ ‘dwelling’
PIE *trĂ©b‑s

Cognates

Lat equus ‘horse’; Ger Dorf ‘village’

fĂ .

relative pronoun type II level n−1: see unit 6, Relative pronouns

Etymology

NLem, LMLem, MLem f‑a, formed after the Ghean relative pronouns
a f‑a s‑a sh‑a x‑a / fˇ‑a sˇ‑a shˇ‑a xˇ‑a
/a Éža s̟a ʃa χa / ÎČa z̟a ʒa ʁa/

fĂ t.

to act/move fast, to make one’s actions/movements fast

Etymology

NLem fet‑a
LMLem, MLem fet‑yr
OLem fet‑
PLem *fesh‑ ‘be fast’, root present of
PIE *h₃eh₁k̑‑

Cognates

Gk ᜠÎș᜻ς ‘fast’

fĂ ph.

agentive dat: to suck something-acc from somewhere-nom

Usage notes

The old literal meaning ‘suck up to someone’ is considered metaphorical today.

Etymology

NLem foph‑a
LMLem, MLem yfophh‑a ‘suck up to’
Ghe əfopshshⁿ‑a /əɾɔpʃʃa/ ‘be friendly’

See ytxĂ . for a similar semantic development.

fĂ ps.

to make it midwinter;
(in measurements, else informal) to make 65536⁞ individuals (see appendix, Units of measurement)

djUtfÌps. Neptunian day, the Lemizh equivalent of New Year’s Eve (symbol: È; see appendix, Date)
djUtfÙlps. lit. ‘the [four] purposes of the Neptunian day / of New Year’s Eve’, referring to food, gifts, charity, and the return of the Sun

psrùb fÌpse. Midwinter God (roughly corresponding to Father Christmas, Santa Claus)

filpskĂ . to make it midsummer

Usage notes

Children generally call the Midwinter God psrùb fÌpse.. His formal (scholarly, religious) name is fOpysrÌf. (as is the name of the planet Neptune in Modern Lemizh).

New Year’s Eve, and the associated festivities, have been called that since Late Middle Lemizh. From Early New Lemizh times onwards, a number of parallels to Father Christmas have sprung up in popular belief – e.g., the Midwinter God is said to find out whether children have been naughty or nice, and brings presents only to the good ones. His sledge, though, is drawn by four porpoises swimming through the air.

Etymology

NLem fOps‑a
LMLem fÒpys‑yr ‘Father Midwinter’
MLem fOOpys‑yr, haplology of
OLem föpysir‑
PLem *foɩ‑paser‑, compound of
  PLem *foɩ‑ ‘?’, Narten present of
PIE *h₃eg‑
 —and—
  PLem *paser‑ ‘father’
PIE *phÌ„â‚‚tĂ©r‑s

The first part of the compound is based on a root of unknown meaning.

Cognates

Eng father

fĂ w.

to make points / an area far (away) from something-nom (see unit 12, Temporal and spatial verbs)

Usage notes

See the connotations section of rĂ c. for some context on gender change in spatial verbs.

Etymology

gender change of
NLem fo‑a, inflected form of
LMLem, MLem afo ‘from’
OLem afo
PLem *afo
PIE *apo

Gender change occurred to avoid homophony with the pronoun fĂ ..

Cognates

Eng of, off, Lat ab ‘from’; unrelated to Eng far, even in non-rhotic dialects

fĂ s.

to kiss someone-dat

Etymology

NLem fOs‑a
LMLem fÒs‑a, verbalisation of
MLem fOOs‑yr ‘mouth’
OLem fös‑
PLem *fƍs‑
PIE *h₃óh₁s

Cognates

Lat ƍs ‘mouth’, Hit ais ‘mouth’

fĂ st.

to peck at something-dat

fĂčst. beak

Etymology

NLem fOst‑a
LMLem fÒsotk‑yr ‘beak’
MLem fOOs‑otk‑yr, compound of
  MLem fOOs‑yr ‘mouth’
OLem fös‑
PLem *fƍs‑
PIE *h₃óh₁s
 —and—
  MLem otk‑yr ‘chicken’
Ghe otq‑ə̄ /ɔtqɯː/, an onomatopoeia like axʱ‑ə̄ /aɎɯː/ ‘cat’ and oxfˇ‑ə̄ /ɔʁÎČɯː/ ‘dog’

Cognates

Lat ƍs ‘mouth’

fafurĂ .

to make banknotes

Etymology

Eth fafƩra
PWald *phĂĄphĆ«r‑as ‘papyrus’
SHell *pĂĄpĆ«r‑os ‘papyrus (Cyperus papyrus)’, of unknown origin

Cognates

Eng paper, papyrus (via Lat papÈłrus)

fisĂ .

to make pears

fisĂš. pear tree
fisÌ. pear

Etymology

NLem fis‑a
LMLem, MLem fis‑yr
OLem fis‑
PLem *afis‑
PIE *h̄́₂pis‑om, probably from a Mediterranean substrate language

No poststem was formed — expected would be ModLem **fàs. — likely for rhythmic analogy with xalà. ‘make apples’.

Cognates

Eng pear

fokĂ j.

to make seals (also the constellation corresponding roughly to Octans and Hydrus; see appendix, Constellations)

Etymology

poststem from plural of
NLem fok‑a
LMLem fĂČk‑yr
Koi φ᜜Îș‑η
SHell *pháč“k‑ā, of unknown origin

fOpysrĂ f.

to make the Midwinter God (roughly corresponding to Father Christmas, Santa Claus); to make the planet Neptune (symbol: È)

Usage notes

The Midwinter God has been said to be a bringer of gifts, and live in the Far North, since Old Lemizh times.

See djeipysrĂ d. for some information on Lemizh polytheism.

This is the formal (scholarly, religious) term. Children generally call him psrùb fÌpse.. (See there for information on popular beliefs, and on the associated weekday.)

Etymology

gender change of
NLem fOpysir‑a, academic loan of
OLem föpysir‑ ‘Father Midwinter’
PLem *foɩ‑paser‑, compound of
  PLem *foɩ‑ ‘?’, Narten present of
PIE *h₃eg‑
 —and—
  PLem *paser‑ ‘father’
PIE *phÌ„â‚‚tĂ©r‑s

The first part of the compound is based on a root of unknown meaning.

Cognates

Eng father

flĂ c.

to make blue, to blue

flàRc. ‘blue hour’, especially regarding the colours, sounds and smells associated with it

flicvnĂš. caesium (symbol: Γλ) (⇐ vnĂš flĂŹce. ‘making fire blue’)

Etymology

NLem flOr‑a
LMLem, MLem fler‑yr
OLem fler‑
PLem *pfler‑ ‘grey, blue(?)’, r-stem adjective of
PIE *bʰleh₁‑ ‘shine, flash’

Most basic colour terms in Lemizh are r-stem Caland adjectives, perhaps motivated by the word for ‘red’. The similarity with Eng flash is purely incidental.

Cognates

Eng blue, Lat flāvus ‘yellow’

frĂ .

to make twelve individuals

Etymology

NLem fr‑a
LMLem, MLem fr‑yl
Ghe fÊłâ€‘É™Ì„ /Ê™Ì„ÉŻË/

frĂ g.

(in measurements, else informal) to make 65536⁎ individuals (see appendix, Units of measurement)

djUtfrÌg. Martian day, the Lemizh equivalent of Tuesday (symbol: Ä; see appendix, Date)

Usage notes

The planet Mars, as well as the god, is called frekrÌf. in Modern Lemizh.

Etymology

NLem frOgr‑a
LMLem frùkur‑yr ‘Brother (in) War’
MLem freekur‑yr
OLem frēkur‑
PLem *pfrā‑kor‑, compound of
  PLem *pfrā‑ ‘brother’, suffixless from of
PIE *bÊ°rĂ©h₂ter‑s
 —and—
  PLem *kor‑ ‘war’
PIE *kór‑os

Cognates

Eng brother; Ger Heer ‘army’

fragmĂ .

to make an electric resistance unit, a resistance of 1.472 ohms (see appendix, Units of measurement)

Etymology

shortened form, academic loan of
Koi Ï†Ïáœ±ÎłÎŒÎ± ‘dam, barrier’
  Koi Ï†ÏÎŹÏƒÏƒÏ‰ ‘fence in, fortify’, of unknown origin

Most electric units use the electricity is water metaphor, which relates electric resistance to a water barrier, such as a dam.

Cognates

Eng dia‑phragm

frĂ dj.

to make/produce a sensory stimulus;
to seem to someone-dat (to be) somehow / like someone-qualnom;
dat: to perceive something-nom

frĂčdj. sensory organ

Etymology

NLem frodj‑a
LMLem fràtj‑a
MLem fraatj‑a
PCelt *φrā́ty‑ƫ, iÌŻe-causative of
PIE *pret‑ ‘realize’

doublet of frodjĂ .

Cognates

Lit prantĂč ‘understand, grasp’

frĂ j.

to make clouds

frymjedÌ. cirrocumulus cloud
frymjcnÌzd. cirrus cloud

Usage notes

Meaning ‘cumulus, cumulonimbus cloud’ in NLem, this word has since been generalised to denote all clouds that neither rain nor snow – for which wzùc. and snùw. are used, respectively. It is also used when talking of clouds in general, without regard to rain or snow.

Etymology

NLem frUn‑a
LMLem frìn‑a ‘boil, churn’
MLem friin‑a
OLem frīn‑
PLem *frīn‑, nasal-infix present of
PIE *h₃reiÌŻH‑

Cognates

Eng run, Gk áœ€Ïáż‘ÌÎœÏ‰ ‘stir up, churn’

frĂ c.

to heat, warm up something (a house, a room)-dat with a stove, a heating

frĂčc. stove, heater, heating

friclĂčj. central heating (⇐ ⇔ frĂ c lÌji. ‘heat up the house’)
frucxĂčf. hot-water radiator (frucxĂčf. ⇐ xÌf frĂčcU. ⇔ frĂčc xÙfu. ‘stove benefitting from water’)

Usage notes

Since devices for heating rooms, houses etc. have technically been separated from cooking devices (soĂčx. ‘kitchen stove’) and water boilers, the meaning of this word has been restricted to the former.

When using this word, don’t forget that the inner factive already means ‘warm up a house or room’, so the tool noun is often dispensable: ‘to turn up the heating in the kitchen’ is best translated as frĂ c soĂČrxi. stove-fact1 cook-sce-dat2., ‘to turn up the central heating’ as friclĂ j..

Etymology

NLem fror‑a ‘(warmth given by a) stove’
LMLem, MLem wirftor‑yr ‘heat (human-made)’
OLem wirftor‑
PLem *werftor‑ ‘fireplace, hearth’
PIE *uÌŻĂ©rh₃‑tor‑s, event agent of
  PIE *uÌŻerh₃‑ ‘be hot, burn’

Cognates

Lit vĂ©rda ‘boil’, probably Eng warm (but see gmrĂ .)

frĂ w.

self-transporting: to amble, stroll, walk without a specific aim

Etymology

NLem frOm‑a
LMLem frùm‑a
MLem freem‑a ‘move aimlessly’
OLem frēm‑
PLem *pfrēm‑ ‘stray, go wrong’, Narten present of
PIE *bʰremH‑ ‘be unsteady, restless’

Cognates

Ved bhrámasi ‘flicker, flare’

frĂ x.

to be astonished, surprised about something-acc/causal-transporting (also dat/causal-receiving, see unit 3, Ambiguous usage);
agentive caus, causal-reflexive: to astonish, surprise someone-nom

Etymology

NLem, LMLem, MLem frux‑a
OLem fruh‑
PLem *pfruh‑ ‘look grim, be troubled’
PIE *bÊ°rĂșh₁‑eh₂ ‘brow’

Cognates

Eng brow, Gk áœ€Ï†ÏáżĄÌÏ‚ ‘eyebrow, brow of a hill’

frĂ xk.

to make/produce fruit, to fruit

frĂšxk. fruiting plant, flowering plant

Usage notes

Fruit, especially strawberries, have been a highly valued food since Old Lemizh times. frĂ Rxk. or frĂČRxk. ‘the time of producing fruit [i.e. strawberries]’ refers to early summer, especially its colours and smells (whereas xalĂ R. and xalĂČR. refer to the end of summer).

Etymology

NLem frOnk‑a
LMLem, MLem frenk‑a
OLem frenk‑
PLem *pfrenk‑, Narten present of
PIE *bʰrenk‑ ‘swell’

Cognates

ON bringa ‘breast, chest’, PSl bręče ‘swelled’

frĂ s.

to make an uncle or aunt of someone-nom (related by blood)

frĂšs. nephew, niece of someone-acc

Etymology

NLem frOs‑a
LMLem frùs‑yr ‘uncle (father’s brother)’
MLem frees‑yr, haplology of
OLem frēsir‑
PLem *pfrāser‑ ‘nephew, grandson (?)’
PIE *bÊ°rĂ©h₂ter‑s ‘brother’

Cognates

Eng brother

frekrĂ f.

to make the god or the planet Mars/Ares (symbol: Ä)

Usage notes

See djeipysrĂ d. for some information on Lemizh polytheism, and frĂ g. for the weekday associated with this god.

Etymology

gender change of
NLem frekur‑a, academic loan of
OLem frēkur‑ ‘Brother (in) War’
PLem *pfrā‑kor‑, compound of
  PLem *pfrā‑ ‘brother’, suffixless from of
PIE *bÊ°rĂ©h₂ter‑s
 —and—
  PLem *kor‑ ‘war’
PIE *kór‑os

Cognates

Eng brother; Ger Heer ‘army’

frodjĂ .

dat: to witness (perceive, observe) something-nom

frodjĂŹ. a witness (e.g. at a wedding or the signing of a document)

Usage notes

A witness on the sense of someone testifying, e.g. at court, is called xudjĂšs..

Etymology

NLem frodj‑a ‘perceive’
LMLem fràtj‑a
MLem fraatj‑a
PCelt *φrā́ty‑ƫ, iÌŻe-causative of
PIE *pret‑ ‘realise’

doublet of frĂ dj.

Cognates

Lit prantĂč ‘understand, grasp’

fnĂ .

to try (to do) something-acc

fnÌ., fnÙl. manage to do something-acc, succeed in doing something-acc

Etymology

gender change of
NLem fing‑a
LMLem, MLem fifing‑a ‘desire’
OLem fifing‑
PLem *fifing‑, i-reduplicated athematic present of
PIE *h₃eiÌŻg̑ʰ‑

Cognates

Gk áŒ°Ï‡Î±ÎœÎŹÏ‰ ‘crave, yearn’

fnĂ wb.

to make an older relative of someone-nom, to make related to someone-nom

fnĂšwb. jounger relative of someone-acc

Etymology

NLem fnumb‑a
LMLem, MLem fnomb‑yr ‘navel, hub’
OLem fnomb‑
PLem *fnomb‑
PIE *h₃nĂłbʰ‑s

Cognates

Eng navel, Gk ᜀΌφαλός ‘navel’

fnĂ sf.

to (emotionally) feel something-acc

Etymology

NLem fnysf‑a
LMLem fnàisf‑a
MLem fna‑eisf‑a ‘feel inwardly, hide one’s feelings’, compound of
  MLem fna‑a ‘feel’
OLem fna‑
PLem *fna‑, nasal-infix present of
PIE *h₃neh₂‑ ‘enjoy’
 —and—
  MLem eisf‑a ‘hide’
Ghe eisf‑a /ɛ͜ÉȘsÌŸÉža/

Cognates

Ice unna ‘love’, Gk áœ€ÎœÎŻÎœÎ·ÎŒÎč ‘be of use’

fmĂ xk.

to pour, spill something-acc somewhere-dat etc.

Etymology

NLem, LMLem, MLem fmink‑a
OLem fmink‑
PLem *fmink‑, sk̑-present of
PIE *h₃meiÌŻg̑ʰ‑ ‘urinate’

Cognates

Lat mingƍ ‘urinate’, Ved mehati ‘urinate’

fmĂ xt.

to make plants

Etymology

NLem fmunt‑a
LMLem, MLem mifont‑yr ‘plant, fungus’
OLem mifont‑
PLem *mifont‑
PIE *mih₃‑ónt‑s ‘something thriving, flourishing’, root present active participle of
  PIE *meih₃‑ ‘thrive, flourish’

Cognates

Hit miyari ‘is born’, possibly Lat mītis ‘mild, mellow’

fkrĂ .

to shoot arrows at something-dat, to do archery

fkrĂš. archer (also the constellation Sagittarius; see appendix, Constellations)
fkrÌ. arrow
fkrĂč. bow

Etymology

NLem fkur‑a ‘shoot arrows’
LMLem pkĂčr‑a
MLem pkueru‑a
OLem pkueru‑ ‘arrow’
PLem *pk‑ueru‑, contraction, compound of
  PLem *pk‑ ‘reach (out)’, sk̑-present of
PIE *peth₂‑ ‘spread (one’s wings), fly (up)’
 —and—
  PLem *gweru‑ ‘skewer, spear’
PIE *gÊ·Ă©ru

The PLem word for an arrow is literally ‘[far] reaching spear’.

Cognates

Eng feather; Ir bior ‘spike, tip’

fkrĂ j.

to make tortoises, turtles (also the constellation Monoceros; see appendix, Constellations)

fkrÌj skrìjy. to shoot oneself in the foot (lit. ‘a tortoise being stung’)

Etymology

NLem fkrongj‑a
LMLem, MLem repkongj‑ar
OLem rep‑konggh‑, compound of
  OLem rep‑ ‘creep’
PLem *ref‑, root present of
PIE *reh₁p‑
 —and—
  OLem konggh‑ ‘shell, mussel’
PLem *konggh‑
PIE *kĂłngʰ‑eh₂

The name of this irritating animal literally means ‘shell(ed) creeper’.

Cognates

Eng reptile (via Lat rēpƍ ‘creep’); Eng, Lat cochlea

ftĂ x.

to play (child-like, without fixed rules), to engage in recreational activity

ftÌx., ftìx. toy (the latter typically for dolls and stuffed toys)

Etymology

NLem ftax‑a
LMLem, MLem ptax‑a ‘duck’ [verb]
OLem ptah‑
PLem *ptah‑, root present of
PIE *pteh₂k‑

Cognates

Gk πτ᜜σσω ‘to duck’, Lat taceƍ ‘be silent’

ftrĂ sk.

to sneeze

Etymology

NLem ftarsk‑a
LMLem, MLem ptarsk‑a
OLem ptarsk‑
PLem *ptarsk‑, sk̑-present of
PIE *pster‑

Cognates

Lat sternuƍ ‘sneeze’

ftnĂ k.

to make eagles (also the constellation Aquila; see appendix, Constellations)

Etymology

NLem ftank‑a
LMLem, MLem ptank‑yr ‘bird of prey’
OLem ptank‑ ‘fly’
PLem *ptanx‑ ‘fly (up)’, nasal-infix present of
PIE *peth₂‑ ‘spread (one’s wings), fly (up)’

doublet of pqxarĂ .

Cognates

Eng feather, Gk Ï€Î­Ï„ÎżÎŒÎ±Îč ‘fly’

fplĂ x.

to make the sky

Etymology

NLem fpalx‑a
LMLem, MLem ufpalx‑yr
OLem uf‑palx‑, compound of
  OLem uf ‘above’, shortened form of
PLem *ufer
PIE *uper
 —and—
  OLem palx‑ ‘flat’
PLem *palx‑, root present of
PIE *pleh₂‑

Cognates

Eng over; Eng floor, Eng plain (via Lat plānus ‘flat, intelligible’)

fprĂ f.

to rustle; to whisper something-acc to someone-dat

Usage notes

The meaning ‘whisper’ is secondary; it developed from metaphorical use of ‘rustle’ and typically connotes a very quiet, friendly whisper.

This verb also, paradoxically, describes the sound of a boiling teapot before it starts to whistle.

Etymology

NLem fprUf‑a
LMLem, MLem perpif‑a ‘move around (violently)’
OLem per‑pifh‑ ‘move around’, compound of
  OLem peri ‘around, through’
PLem, PIE *peri
 —and—
  OLem pifh‑ ‘move’ [intr.]
PLem *pifh‑, i-reduplicated athematic present of
PIE *peh₁‑

Cognates

Gk Ï€Î”ÏÎŻ ‘about, around’; Ved vi-pipānĂĄ- ‘sorting out’

fxĂ c.

to make dragons (also the constellation consisting of Draco and most of Ursa Minor; see appendix, Constellations)

Etymology

NLem fxurm‑a
LMLem, MLem fxurm‑yr
OLem fxurm‑
PLem *fxurm‑, of unknown origin; related to PIE *uÌŻr̄́mi‑s ‘worm’?

fxyrcrĂ .

to make lizards

Etymology

simplification, compound of
  ModLem fxĂ c. ‘dragon’
NLem fxurm‑a
LMLem, MLem fxurm‑yr
OLem fxurm‑
PLem *fxurm‑, of unknown origin; related to PIE *uÌŻr̄́mi‑s ‘worm’?
 —and—
  ModLem crĂ . ‘1/4’, gender change of
NLem crumbw‑a ‘2/6’
LMLem crumbw‑yr, contamination of
MLem srumbw‑yr ‘few, little’
OLem srumbw‑
PLem *tsrumbw‑ ‘of little worth’, u-stem adjective of
PIE *dÊ°reuÌŻbʰ‑ ‘break’ [intr.], crumble’
 —with—
MLem cambr‑yr ‘negligible’
OLem zhambr‑
PLem *dzambr‑ ‘few, little’, r-stem adjective of
PIE *dʰebʰ‑ ‘reduce’

Okay, this is just a simplification of a modern compound with epenthetic ext, meaning ‘little dragon’.