<div dir="ltr">to put it into wider-than-Germanic perspective, the word is definitely Indo-European: cf Russian путь, Old Church Slavoinc пѫть, Sanskrit पथः, and English path, Anglo-Saxon <span class="gmail-st">pæþ</span>, Dutch pad, and German Pfad, all with basically the same meaning path, way, course, route. Indo-European would have been *panthis. And the common link with Latin pons, acc. pontem, etc would indicate maybe an even more basic meaning of the rood "how to get from here to there"<br><div class="gmail_extra"><br>And, matching well with what Marcel said above about (High) German words starting in *p, IE roots in *p- do not normally give German words in in *p (ratehr, like Pfad, they give words in *pf-), indicating that, although common Indo-European, and with Germanic cognates, the German*p words got into German not by the normal path (excuse the pun) but through borrowing (in this case no doubt from Latin, though it could conceivably come form Low German... though the nasal would tend to indicate Latin not Low German. If the loan were very very early, then Slavic might also conceivably be a source, but given the sense of the word, this seems unlikely)<br><br><br>Dr Michael W Morgan<br><div class="gmail_signature"><div dir="ltr"><div>mwm || *U*C> || mike || माईक || માઈક || মাঈক || மாஈக || مایک ||мика || 戊流岸マイク <br>sign language linguist / linguistic typologist / Deaf education consultant<br>"Have language, will travel"<br>=====================================<br>"People who are always looking down at the bottom line will always fail to see the stars" <br><br></div></div></div>
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