- neu̯os, -i̯os
- neu̯os, -i̯osEnglish meaning: newDeutsche Übersetzung: “neu”Material: O.Ind. náva-, Av. nava- “neu”, compar. navatara- (: Gk. νεώτερος), Gk. νέ(F)ος, Lat. novus, Osc. Núvlanúis “Nōlünīs” (from *Núvelü = Lat. Nōla), O.Lith. navas, O.Pruss. neuwenen certain nom. sg. n. (*nawanjan; O.Pruss. nauns probably after jauns “ young “), O.Bulg. novъ “neu”; -i̯o-form O.Ind. návya-, Ion. νεῖος, Gaul. Nevio-, Novio-dūnum (“Neuenburg”), O.Ir. nūë , Welsh newydd, O.Bret. nouuid, neuued, Bret. neuez, Goth. niujis, O.Ice. nȳr, O.H.G. O.S. niuwi, O.E. nīwe, nēowe, Lith. naũjas “neu”; Toch. А ñu, В ñune ds., Hitt. neu̯a- ds.; with -ro-forms Gk. νε(F)αρός, Arm. nor “neu” (*nou̯ero-), Lat. nover-ca ‘stiefmutter”; Maybe truncated Alb. (*nou̯ero-) re (fem.), ri (masc.) “new”. Gk. νεάω = Lat. novüre “erneuen” (therefrom novülis “ein farmland, the zum ersten Male or after one-year-old Ruhe gepflũgt wird”; forms as in aequülis, also “junges Alter habend”); νεότης = Lat. novitüs “Neuheit”; Feminina with ī- besides ü -suffix (see Specht IE Decl.323 f.) lie consecutive formations the basic: Lat. novīcius “neu, Neuling”; Russ. novíkъ “Neuling”; Gk. νέᾱξ “young Kerl”; Church Slavic novakъ “Neuling”; but νεᾱνίᾱς “ youngling “ from νεFο- αν- “young Atmender”; νεοχμός “neu” see above S. 414.References: WP. II 324, WH. II 181, Trautmann 194.See also: Changing through ablaut nū̆ “nun” see there; s. also *e-neu̯en “ nine “.
Proto-Indo-European etymological dictionary. 2015.