ππΉπ»
Appearance
Gothic
[edit]Etymology
[edit]Occurring only once in the accusative, the exact form and context of this word are not sufficient to determine its part of speech and etymology. There are two options:
- Either it is an a-stem neuter (corresponding to Proto-Germanic *tilΔ ) or masculine (*tilaz) noun; compare also the Kovel spearhead inscription and perhaps German Ziel,
- Or it is the (here substantivized) accusative strong neuter form of the a-stem adjective *ππΉπ»π (*tils) (corresponding to *tilaz) which is found also in π²π°ππΉπ»π (gatils).
Following Lehmann, the first option is here taken as a lemma.
Noun
[edit]- something fitting or suitable (attested only as an accusative singular; plausibly not a noun at all)
- Gothic Bible, Luke 6.7:
- π πΉππ°πΉπ³π΄π³πΏπ½πΏπ· πΈπ°π½ πΈπ°πΉ π±ππΊπ°ππΎππ πΎπ°π· ππ°ππ΄πΉππ°πΉπ΄πΉπ, πΎπ°πΏ πΉπ½ ππ°π±π±π°ππ π³π°π²π° π»π΄πΉπΊπΉπ½ππ³π΄π³πΉ, π΄πΉ π±πΉπ²π΄ππ΄πΉπ½π° ππΉπ» π³πΏ π πππ·πΎπ°π½ πΉπ½π°.
- witaidΔdunuh ΓΎan ΓΎai bΕkarjΕs jah fareisaieis, jau in sabbatΕ daga leikinΕdΔdi, ei bigΔteina til du wrΕhjan ina.
- And the scribes and Pharisees watched him, whether he would heal on the sabbath day; that they might find something suitable to accuse him.
- Gothic Bible, Luke 6.7: