- peu̯ōr, pū̆ r, gen. pu-n-es, loc. puu̯eni
- peu̯ōr, pū̆ r, gen. pu-n-és, loc. puu̯éniEnglish meaning: fireDeutsche Übersetzung: “Feuer”Note: with mannigfacher Ausgleichung the r- and n-forms and of vocalismMaterial: Arm. hur (gen. hroy) “fire” (*pū̆ r-), hn-oc̣ “oven” (*pū̆ n-); Gk. πῦρ, πῠρός “fire”, wherefore πυρά̄ “Feuerstätte, stove, hearth, Scheiterhaufen”, πυρετός m. “fever”, πυρσός m. “Brandfackel”, korinth. ΠυρFος “Pferdename” (*”feuerrot”), πυρρός, poet. πυρσός “feuerrot” (*πυρσFός); Maybe Illyr. TN Pirustae (Pipustae) Umbr. pir “fire” (*pūr), acc. purom-e “ins fire” (*pŭr-), Osc. aasaí purasiaí “in araigniaria”; O.Ice. fūrr m. “fire” (*pūr-) and fȳrr, fȳri; O.H.G. O.S. O.Fris. fiur (*peu̯ri); O.H.G. older fuir (disyllabic, compare Musp. vugir), O.E. fȳr (from dem loc. *puu̯éri); Goth. fōn “fire” (*pu̯ōn), gen. dat. funins, funin (latter from *puneni, a hybridization from *puu̯éni : *pun-és), O.Ice. funi m. “fire”; O.H.G. funko, M.Eng. fonke ‘spark”; with ablaut (*pu̯on-) M.L.G. vanke ‘spark”; Maybe Illyr. TN Perestae (Penestae) O.Pruss. panno “fire”, panu-staclan “Feuerstrahl” (*pu̯on-u), Lw. finn. panu “fire”; Slav. *pūri̯ a- m. “glowing ash” in Cz. pūř m. and pūři n. ds.; in addition O.Cz. pyřina “favilla”, Cz. pūřeti “glow”, Serb. upíriti “anfachen” etc.; Hitt. paḫḫur, paḫḫuwar, dat. paḫhu(e)ni “fire”; Toch. A por, В puwü̆ r, pwür ds.References: WP. II 14 f., WH. II 391, Trautmann 206, 232, Benveniste Origines 1, 10; Pedersen Hitt. 187 f.
Proto-Indo-European etymological dictionary. 2015.