medhyo-

medhyo-
Middle.
Derivatives include middle, medieval, and meridian.
1.
a. mid1, midst; amid, from Old English midd(e), middle;
b. middle, from Old English middel, middle, from West Germanic diminutive form *middila-;
c. Midgard, from Old Norse Midhgardhr, Midgard, from Germanic compound *midja-gardaz, “middle zone,” name of the earth conceived as an intermediate zone lying between heaven and hell (*gardaz, enclosure, yard; see gher-1). a-c all from Germanic *midja-.
3. meso-, from Greek mesos, middle.
 
[Pokorny medhi- 706.] See also me-2.

* * *


Universalium. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Поможем сделать НИР

Look at other dictionaries:

  • mediocre — me·di·o·cre (mē′dē ō’kər) adj. ▸ Of ordinary or undistinguished quality. See Synonyms at AVERAGE(Cf. ↑average). ╂ [French médiocre, from Latin mediocris : medius, middle; see medhyo + ocris, a rugged mountain; see ak .] Word History: Belying the… …   Word Histories

  • Midgard — For other uses, see Midgard (disambiguation). The runes a:miþkarþi for Old Norse à Miðgarði meaning in Midgard in Middle Earth , on the Fyrby Runestone (Sö 56) in Södermanland, Sweden. Midgard (an Anglicised[ …   Wikipedia

  • Salento — For other uses, see Salento (disambiguation). Salento. Salento (Salentu in local dialect) is the south eastern extremity of the Apulia region of Italy. It is a sub peninsula of the main Italian Peninsula, sometimes described as the heel of the… …   Wikipedia

  • Messapii — Messapians redirects here. For other uses, see Messapian (disambiguation). Ancient Italic tribes within the Italian peninsula.   Ligures …   Wikipedia

  • Phonological change — Sound change and alternation Metathesis Quantitative metathesis …   Wikipedia

  • mezzaluna — mez·za·lu·na (mĕt sə lo͞oʹnə) n. A curved steel blade, often with a vertical handle at each end, used to chop food.   [Italian, crescent, mezzaluna : mezza, feminine of mezzo, half (from Latin medius. See medhyo + …   Universalium

  • gher- — I. gher 1 To grasp, enclose; with derivatives meaning “enclosure.” Oldest form *g̑her , becoming *gher in centum languages. Derivatives include orchard, kindergarten, courteous, choir, and choral. 1. Suffixed zero grade form *ghr̥ dh …   Universalium

  • me- — I. me 1 Oblique form of the personal pronoun of the first person singular. For the nominative see eg. 1. me, myself, from Old English mē̆ (dative and accusative), from Germanic *mē̆ . 2. Possessive adjective *mei no . a …   Universalium

  • μέσος — η, ο(ν) (ΑM μέσος, η, ον, Α επικ. τ. μέσσος, βοιωτ. και κρητ. τ. μέττος) 1. (τοπ. και χρον.) αυτός που βρίσκεται μεταξύ δύο ακραίων ορίων ή μεταξύ αρχής και τέλους, μεσαίος, κεντρικός, μεσιανός 2. το κεντρικό σημείο πράγματος, το μεσαίο σημείο… …   Dictionary of Greek

  • medial — {{11}}medial (adj.) 1560s, pertaining to a mathematical mean, from L.L. medialis of the middle, from L. medius in the middle, from PIE *medhyo middle (Cf. Skt. madhyah, Avestan madiya middle, Gk. mesos, Goth. midjis, O.E. midd middle, O.C.S …   Etymology dictionary

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”