ģermānis

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See also: germanis

Latvian

 ģermāņi on Latvian Wikipedia
Ģermāņi

Etymology

Via other European languages, ultimately a Template:borrowing, a term introduced by Julius Caesar from a Gaulish word for a group of tribes living in Northeastern Gaul (probably orignally the name of one of these tribes). The original meaning was probably “neighbor” (cf. (deprecated template usage) [etyl] Old Irish (deprecated template usage) gairm), or perhaps “noisy” (cf. (deprecated template usage) [etyl] Old Irish (deprecated template usage) garim).[1]

Pronunciation

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Noun

ģermānis m (2nd declension, feminine form: ģermāniete)

  1. (deprecated template usage) (historical) (ancient) German; a member of one of the ancient Germanic peoples of primitive Germania
    es esmu ģermānis — I am an ancient German
    romieši ģermāņus pazina labi — the Romans knew the Germans (= Germanic people) well
    ģermāņi ap 1. gadsimtu dzīvoja plašās teritorijās starp Reinu un Vislu no rietumiem uz austrumiem — the Germanic peoples around the 1st century (CE) lived over a wide terriotry between the Rhine and the Vistula from west to east
  2. (deprecated template usage) (genitive plural) Germanic; pertainig to ancient Germans, their languages, and their modern descendants
    ģermāņu valodas — the Germanic languages
    ģermāņu mitoloģijaGermanic mythology
    ģermāņu ciltisGermanic tribes

Declension

See also

References

  1. ^ Harper, Douglas. Online Etymological Dictionary. http://www.etymonline.com