- the
succeeding vowel or semivowel: Old
Norse gestr (guest) came from PN
gastiz (guest).
Another sound change is
known as
vowel breaking in
which the vowel...
- Italy, has been
interpreted by some
scholars as
Harigasti Teiwǣ (*harja-
gastiz 'army-guest' + *teiwaz 'god, deity'),
which could be an
invocation to a...
- *wulfaz *wulfōz, -ōs *
gastiz *
gastīz Vocative *wulf *gasti
Accusative *wulfą *wulfanz *gastį *gastinz
Genitive *wulfas, -is *wulfǫ̂ *
gastīz *gastijǫ̂ Dative...
- *
gastiz ‘guest’ (masc.) *mari ‘sea’ (neut.)
Singular Plural Singular Plural Nominative *
gastiz *
gastīz *mari *marī
Vocative *gasti
Accusative *gastį *gastinz...
- umlaut, and Old High
German gast,
which does not, both from Proto-Germanic *
gastiz. That may mean that
there was
dialectal variation in the
timing and spread...
-
Germanic name: the
Common Germanic *albi-
gastiz,
composed of the well
attested elements *albi- "elf" and *
gastiz "guest".
There is one
dwarf named Elbegast...
- i-stem
nouns in the nom./acc. sg.: PG *winiz > OE wine "friend" but PG *
gastiz > OE ġiest "guest"; u-stem
nouns in the nom./acc. sg.: PG *sunuz > OE sunu...
- Gesulfus, Ierulfus, Giraldus, Gismundus, Germundus, Gisovredus,
Gisvado gast- *
gastiz "guest"
Gastre gaud-, caud- no
clear etymology;
perhaps *gaut- or Latin...
- Ierulfus, Giraldus, Gismundus, Germundus, Gisovredus,
Gisvado gast-, to PGmc *
gastiz "guest":
Gastre gaud-, caud-, no
clear etymology;
possibly to *gaut- "Goth"...
- historikoak".
Sareko Euskal Gramatika (in Basque).
Retrieved 1 June 2022.
Gastiz (7
January 2006). "La Reja de San Millán (1025):
Toponimia alavesa del siglo...