- has a
parallelism establishing bill and
suert as
synonyms (v. 53f.
suertu hauwan,
bretun mit sinu
billiu "[he shall] hew [at me] with [his] sword, lay [me]...
- example, Proto-Germanic *hawwaną 'to chop'
became Proto-West-Germanic *
hauwan,
which became Old
English hēawan,
pronounced [ˈhæːɑwɑn]. A
change of word-initial...
- ("possession"), *ham- ('"skin, hide,
exterior appearance), or *haw,
related to OS
hauwan ("to strike"). The
second element is PGmc *wardu ("guard"). An
exiled Dane...
-
Unlike /ɛi/, they are
always followed by a
corresponding semivowel, as in
hauwan and breuwan. Thus they
could just as well be
analyzed as a
short vowel followed...
-
haswa "grey, ashen")
havir haver "to cut" ( < Dial Fr (Walloon) < Frk *
hauwan "to cut"; *hauwa "hoe,
cutting implement" < Gmc, cf OHG
houwen "to cut,...