penini: Difference between revisions
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|gender=masc. | |gender=masc. | ||
|language=Celtic | |language=Celtic | ||
|analysis_morphemic={{m|penn-|penn}}{{m|- | |analysis_morphemic={{m|penn-|penn}}{{m|-īn-|-īn}}{{m|-ī}} | ||
|analysis_phonemic= | |analysis_phonemic=/{{p|p}}{{p|e}}{{p|nn}}{{p|ī}}{{p|n}}{{p|ī}}/ | ||
|meaning='of Peninos' (?) | |meaning='of Peninos' (?) | ||
|checklevel=5 | |checklevel=5 | ||
Revision as of 15:57, 5 July 2023
| Attestation: | BG·41.24 (penini) (1) |
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| Language: | Celtic |
| Word Type: | proper noun |
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| Grammatical Categories: | gen. sg. masc. |
| Stem Class: | o |
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| Morphemic Analysis: | penn-īn-ī |
| Phonemic Analysis: | /pennīnī/ |
| Meaning: | 'of Peninos' (?) |
Commentary
In light of the two attestations of the theonym poininos in the Carona petrographs, Motta in Casini et al. 2014: 201 is probably right in identifying penini as another variant. Based on his etymology of the name, Motta interprets penin- as the original Celtic form without the diphthong in the root. The ending can be nothing else but a genitive, though the theonym usually appears in the dative, but cf. the nominative poininos at Carona. Cf. also the possible abbreviation pe.
Bibliography
| Casini et al. 2014 | Stefania Casini, Angelo E. Fossati, Filippo Motta, "Nuove iscrizioni in alfabeto di Lugano sul masso Camisana 1 di Carona (Bergamo)", Notizie Archeologiche Bergomensi 22 (2014), 179–203. |
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